I strolled the 26 and 2700 blocks of Utah today.
Narrow:
Listing Houses and Chimney:
For Chris over at St. Louis Patina:
Marble staircase:
Fleur-de-lis anchor plate and an elevation designed to enclose the original copper downspout:
Decorative anchor plates or wall washers:
Presenting a collection of St. Louis bricks, sidewalk markers, and the Fleur-de-lis as architectural detail on and in city buildings, brick collecting, urban exploration, and my life by Christian Herman. Reporting from Tower Grove South in St. Louis, MO
9/5/11
9/4/11
TGS Architecture Walking Tour
I'm hosting a TGS Architecture Walking Tour on Sunday, Sept 18. The tour will begin at Utah and Grand and will be lead by Architect, David Lott. David has volunteered to conduct two tours, one at 1PM, the next at 3PM.
The tours are a fundraiser for the TGS Block Captain Fund and the donation is 10.00 per person.
Please save the date and join us for an hour long walk through TGS and learn about our historic built environment.
The tours are a fundraiser for the TGS Block Captain Fund and the donation is 10.00 per person.
Please save the date and join us for an hour long walk through TGS and learn about our historic built environment.
8/28/11
Interview with Writer Peter Plate
Click on the title to read an interview I did in 1986 with then emerging writer, Peter Plate.
7/31/11
Sidewalk Marks
Also see the updated article:
http://www.edhat.com/site/tidbit.cfm?nid=67179
Click on the title and thanks to BF Pat Fish for providing the link.
http://www.edhat.com/site/tidbit.cfm?nid=67179
Click on the title and thanks to BF Pat Fish for providing the link.
7/12/11
7/8/11
6/29/11
Devastation on 4000 Utah Street
4000 Utah is one of my favorite blocks in TGS and is populated with perfect Craftsman Bungalows. Note that all the trees along the south side of the street have been removed.
The post below was written by Marsha who lives on 4100 Utah.
The post below was written by Marsha who lives on 4100 Utah.
MSD work on Utah to replace aged storm sewers from Roger to Bent began about two
months ago. Homeowners on the 4000-4100 blocks were notified by a brief letter
that the work was to take place, which included only the name of the contractor
(Gershenson Inc.) and that the work could take up to a year to complete and
would impact Utah, Roger, Oak Hill and Bent.
After the work began at the corner of Utah and Roger, it was determined that
Laclede Gas should initiate work on gas supply lines on the same two blocks of
Utah, ahead of the sewer line replacement work. Since April or early May,
Laclede has been working their way up the two blocks, while MSD remained in the
area of the Utah/Roger intersection.
About 10 days ago I heard via rumor that MSD would be destorying all street
trees on the south side of 40-41 Utah (about 20) while trenching the entire tree
lawn on the two blocks to a depth of 9 ft.
The scope of the sewer replacement project was not shared in any detail at all
with homeowners, or apparently with officials of the City. (Is it true that
there is some kind of covenant that MSD has no obligation to obtain approval
from the City for the scope and method used to make repairs?)
Last night several large sections of new sewer pipe were laid out on top of the
tree lawn heading west from Roger on the south side of Utah. At the end of the
day today, all but one of the street trees on 4000 Utah had vanished, cut to
almost grass level by chain saws.
Is there no other way to accomplish sewer line replacement than to devastate a
neighborhood, destroying decades old trees that provide shade, noise and toxic
pollution reduction, habitat for wildlife and great character and charm to the
homes on the block? The fact that the tree lawn would be trenched and trees
destroyed was never communicated in any way to property owners.
Surely this can't be the only two blocks in the City to require sewer line
replacement -- does the same devastation occur on every block where MSD does
replacement work?
6/23/11
Burn.Question
I move with a relentless force that radiates while staring out the window at clouds, Cooper's hawks, the limestone cornice, and terra cotta rosettes.
I asked: What is your experience with or how would you define freedom?
You looked back with cautiously expressionless eyes.
This is where I engage movement and it articulates and defines me. This is where I achieve validity with constant motion, constant, and it's my only understanding of being free. It's an abstraction that I glimpse when moving, the abstract movement of contrasts, the gentle rub of resistance that is hot and comforting.
You are extensive like light or gravity, a massive incontrovertible force. Substantial. Fluid. Moving.
Freedom is just more capitalism.
----------------
Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the Shadow.
- T.S. Eliot
---------------------------------------
The site:
View from the window:
What's left of Mo State Hospital retains some fascinating details: limestone columns, limestone dentil molding, capitals with melting eagles, rotunda roof (painted, that's not copper patina), massive terra cotta rosettes. The original arched windows are missing. They've been replaced and a concrete lentil rests above each window. Arched windows still remain in the rotunda roof.
I estimate the superb limestone capitals on the front of the building to be 5 feet in height.
I asked: What is your experience with or how would you define freedom?
You looked back with cautiously expressionless eyes.
This is where I engage movement and it articulates and defines me. This is where I achieve validity with constant motion, constant, and it's my only understanding of being free. It's an abstraction that I glimpse when moving, the abstract movement of contrasts, the gentle rub of resistance that is hot and comforting.
You are extensive like light or gravity, a massive incontrovertible force. Substantial. Fluid. Moving.
Freedom is just more capitalism.
----------------
Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the Shadow.
- T.S. Eliot
---------------------------------------
The site:
View from the window:
What's left of Mo State Hospital retains some fascinating details: limestone columns, limestone dentil molding, capitals with melting eagles, rotunda roof (painted, that's not copper patina), massive terra cotta rosettes. The original arched windows are missing. They've been replaced and a concrete lentil rests above each window. Arched windows still remain in the rotunda roof.
I estimate the superb limestone capitals on the front of the building to be 5 feet in height.
6/4/11
Behind the Brick
5/25/11
Fist size
5/19/11
Two white guys
5/4/11
4/14/11
2/27/11
The Kingshighway Viaduct and Skate Park
I read (click on the title) that the demo of the KHW viaduct is starting soon and wanted to revisit the area below the deck. I had the willies driving down the rumble strewn road along the east side but was enchanted to encounter a large group of friendly men and their underground DIY skate park complete with freestanding ramps and a recently created 'pool'.
I also had a great chat with the author of http://we-are-the-city.blogspot.com/
It was baffling to discover a dumpster under the bridge.
I called my 10th ward alderman Joe Vollmer. He said he's supportive of them being there -hence the dumpster - and wants to work with them to develop skate parks in our ward.
Reinforced piers:
Missing parapet:
In the middle of the photo there's a small figure, one of a group of boys who'd discovered the LRA board up had been removed:
Cracks in the piers
Entrance to the viaduct from South Kingshighway
Downspout encased in concrete:
I also had a great chat with the author of http://we-are-the-city.blogspot.com/
It was baffling to discover a dumpster under the bridge.
I called my 10th ward alderman Joe Vollmer. He said he's supportive of them being there -hence the dumpster - and wants to work with them to develop skate parks in our ward.
Reinforced piers:
Missing parapet:
In the middle of the photo there's a small figure, one of a group of boys who'd discovered the LRA board up had been removed:
Cracks in the piers
Entrance to the viaduct from South Kingshighway
Downspout encased in concrete:
2/18/11
I'm back.
I was working.
I worked every single day last year while attending to volunteer business and didn't have much time for brick spotting. I smacked down a lot of debt, did some work on my building, and didn't go on vacation.
My business took me on some long drives on wide highways. I still won't call them interstates. I marveled at expanses of sky while traveling on highway 44. I avoid 40 because it's disorienting. The remodel with its extensive sound barriers is like driving through a courtyard.
Here's a building I encountered on Morgan Ford. The green bricks are spooky and the finish is stucco-ish. Check out the green patina on the original copper gutter and how it matches the green bricks. The original downspout matches and I'm betting that was deliberate.
Gorgeous palette:
I worked every single day last year while attending to volunteer business and didn't have much time for brick spotting. I smacked down a lot of debt, did some work on my building, and didn't go on vacation.
My business took me on some long drives on wide highways. I still won't call them interstates. I marveled at expanses of sky while traveling on highway 44. I avoid 40 because it's disorienting. The remodel with its extensive sound barriers is like driving through a courtyard.
Here's a building I encountered on Morgan Ford. The green bricks are spooky and the finish is stucco-ish. Check out the green patina on the original copper gutter and how it matches the green bricks. The original downspout matches and I'm betting that was deliberate.
Gorgeous palette:
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