Friday, December 18, 2009

Princeton Heights Neighborhood

Princeton Heights is located in south St. Louis generally bounded by Gravois on the east and southeast, Hampton to the west and southwest and Eichelberger to the north. Before a family member of mine moved here, I always thought this part of town was called Southampton. Wrong, that is the neighborhood to the north.

This neighborhood has got to be one of St. Louis' best examples of the "gingerbread house". Street after street, house after house have the charm and craftsmanship that make St. Louis so great. Many of the houses may look the same while passing through in the car; but a nice long walk through the streets will prove that almost every home has it's unique charm or touches that set it apart from it's immediate neighbors.

Here are some interesting facts about street name changes over the years:

"Bonita was known as Wiesehahn, Eichelberger was known as Clark Road, Gresham was known as Kaiser, Holly Hills was known as Kansas, Nagel was known as Brunzwick, Sunshine was known as Upton. There were street names such as Mecklenburg, Bewen, Helvetia, Brunswick, Korn and Wisehann that have now cease to exist. and In 1947, Wilmore Park was created from the old Ellebeck's Farm."

I like the Germanic names. Sunshine and Holly Hills sound too much like a Carpenters song. What's next Summer Breeze lane? Mmmm I can smell the jasmine.

It's obvious that this neighborhood is tidy and well maintained. People here care and love where they live. The manicured lawns, clean alleys and beautiful homes are welcoming. Our photo excursion was taken on a beautiful fall day where we encountered many other pedestrians walking dogs, babies, etc. There is a lot of activity in this neighborhood and it appears to be very densely populated. There are very few depressed or ramshackle properties. There are no streets that look in disrepair or abandoned. The alleys are well maintained and a place for kids to ride bikes and parents to socialize:

Let's take a look at the numbers from the 2000 census:

Ding ding ding, we have a winner for the first neighborhood I've visited thus far that gained in population from 1990 to 2000. Congrats Princeton Heights on the 3% gain in population from 8,029 to 8,238 residents. This neighborhood is 95% white, 2.2% Hispanic/Latino and 1.9% black. The other races make up the minute remainder.


90% of the households in PH are "family households", 75% of which are married and 46% have kids under 18 years of age. 95% of the homes are occupied, 69% of which are owner occupied.


This is a rock solid neighborhood. My dream is to have more neighborhoods with this kind of occupancy rates and overall stable feel and healthy intra-neighborhood businesses. Here are some of my personal favorites:


Arnold Hardware


Gravois Glass (they do great glass and glazing work on old wooden windows)


Billy Goat Chip Company


Onesto


Southside Cyclery

There is a Schnucks at Gravois and Germania that is one of the cleanest and most organized in town. Our Lady of Sorrows is a strong parish with an elementary school built in the last couple of years ($5060/year). The church seems to be quite an anchor for the neighborhood, as there are many Catholics in this part of STL.

There are plenty of available retail spaces along Macklind, which could extend the SoHa retail district from Southampton to PH. For example, this nice tree lined stretch just south of Rhodes:
One of my favorite retail spaces in the entire city:
Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this vinyl wall!
Anyhow, PH is really about the homes and the streets, so here are some random shots of some of the beautiful properties in Princeton Heights:

It's the little things that set these beauties apart from each other:

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Downtown Macy's Escalator Tribute

I am a big fan of the downtown Macy's. It's in a fabulous building, close to a Metrolink stop and is staffed by kind people. It's got a cool restaurant (Papa Fabarre's), it isn't part of an annoyingly jarring indoor mall and is never overrun with people; no lines (good for customer, bad for retailer).

Obviously, I am happy that Macy's is going to keep this location open. Yet, I'm sad that they are downsizing it. Not because of the loss of goods and retail square footage, but because of the escalators. Man I'm a dork, I know it, but damn it, I will desperately miss the varied styles of escalators in this department store. From the old school wood to the brushed stainless steel art deco ones to the more modern glass ones like you see today. I fear these will go the way of the typewriter during the remodeling. I hope not, but I fear the worst. Here's my photo tribute to a department store and escalators that have soul:
My kids love getting Swedish fish at the candy counter:
I will miss the marble floors too.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Urbanstl.com

is anyone else twitching with withdrawal symptoms over the lack of urbanstl.com?

Monday, November 30, 2009

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Carondelet Park Rec Plex-Grand Opening

The city just became a better place to live and raise a family. This place is amazing. I trust the YMCA will take care and run this facility with professionalism and fairness. I can't say I would trust the city to staff/run a clean, safe, professionally organized facility. We walked in today to many familiar faces, neighbors, friends and Loughborough YMCA acquaintances. Everyone was stoked about this place. Check it out:
There are bike racks in two separate areas:There are 3 kids areas. One is for infants and toddlers, up to 4 years old; there are cribs, padded floors, etc. The second is for 5-7 year olds. There are legos, blocks, slides, computers and a wii with guitar hero. The 3rd is for kids 8 and up with foosball, rock climbing wall, dance dance revolution, computers, etc:
The cardio and weight area is huge with lots of natural light:
Indoor track, 11 laps = 1 mile:

Double gym for volleyball, basketball, etc.:Indoor pool area has 2.5 story waterslide, lazy river, zero entry kids splash area, steam room, sauna, lap lanes, hot tub, whirlpool, family shower/locker rooms:
Outdoor pool has kids area, swim lanes, diving area, concession stand and a waterslide:Ballet/yoga/pilates/etc:
Senior area with fireplace:
Meeting rooms:Check it out for yourself, comment with your opinions.