Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Prepared by
Michael R. Allen, Principal Author
Lydia Slocum, Contributor
Tia Shepard, Contributor
March 2014
Table of Contents
1. Background and Methodology
Background
Methodology
2
2
2
4
4
4
9
11
13
14
16
3. Bibliography
20
4. Figures
22
39
39
40
44
48
53
58
Building Name
Address
Euclid Plaza
Apartments
James House
Apartments
Kingsbury Terrace
Apartments
Parkview Apartments
Date of
Construction
1969
Architects
1970
1969
Stanford G. Brooks
1971
Jack H. Tyrer
1970
Arthur J. Sitzwohl
Peckham &Guyton
The Warwood building, originally built for the Authority as a high-rise public housing tower under
the Turnkey program, was not included because it is no longer under Authority ownership.
Methodology
Staff from the Preservation Research Office developed a research plan for this survey that
included investigation of archival sources, field visits to each tower and examination of literature
that established context for the Turnkey program. The primary source of archival information
was the St. Louis Housing Authority information files on the Turnkey program and on each of
the towers. The Missouri History Museum Library and Collection Center and the St. Louis
History Collection at the St. Louis Public Library were other archival sources. Building data on
each project came from building permit records in the Records Retention Division of the Office
of the Comptroller, City of St. Louis, and the St. Louis Daily Record.
Michael Allen and Lydia Slocum conducted site visits to examine and photograph each building
in June 2013. Photography was used to evaluate integrity of each resources based on original
renderings and historic photographs in the St. Louis Housing Authority files.
Based on review comments from the State Historic Preservation Office and the Cultural
Resources Office of the City of St. Louis, the authors revised and reorganized this document for
final submission in February 2014.
development second.3 Thus, two new sources of funding came with the new Housing Act: Title I,
which provided $1 billion for purchase and demolition of neighborhoods defined as slums; and
Title III, which provided $1.5 billion to finance 810,000 units of public housing and $308 million
to cover the gap between rents and construction costs.4 The new funds inspired a sense of
optimism about the possibilities of reviving the American city, according to historian Alexander
Von Hoffman.5
The joining of federal public housing and housing clearance funds ensured that almost all new
projects would occupy the sites of low-income, often African-American neighborhoods. While
city planners including St. Louis Harland Bartholomew welcomed the joint funding as
mechanism to rehouse people living in substandard housing, the reality betrayed flaws in the
Housing Act. Bartholomew estimated that 35% of the citys land mass was occupied by
substandard housing.6 Historian Edward L. Goetz writes of the promise of rehousing that in the
end the program never fulfilled that promise and in the end demolished much more low-cost
housing than it ever built.7 The St. Louis projects built under the Housing Act fit the national
pattern in entailing the loss of more housing stock than what was built, and leading to more
exodus from the clearance areas than return. Additionally, post-1949 housing projects in St.
Louis initially would reinforce racial segregation of the city.8
Still, by 1957, U.S. News and World Report reported that American cities had built over 142
slum-clearance projects at a total cost of $42 million public funds and $2 billion in private funds.9
Many of these projects were like the ones in St. Louis, embracing an influential vision of towerin-the-park advanced by the architect Le Corbusier as far back as the 1920s.10 Le Corbusiers
famous Plan Voisin called for replacing a dense section of Paris with a utopian cluster of crossaxis residential towers set on wide lawns and placed in a rigid grid formation (figure 1).
Corbusiers vision would be repeated in later plans advanced by other architects and embraced
by the International Congresses for Modern Architecture at its fifth congress in 1937. American
architects and planners embraced Corbusiers ideals for ordered space and residential towers
especially as remedies for urban decay and overcrowding. St. Louis towers, with modern brickclad concrete slabs, set on wide open lawns, embodied the architectural trend well.
SLHA developed a series of projects using Title III: the John Cochran Gardens Apartments
(1953), the Wendell O. Pruitt Apartments (1956), the William L. Igoe Homes (1956), the George
L. Vaughn Homes (1958), the Joseph Darst Homes (1957) and the Anthony M. Webbe Homes
(1961). Later Pruitt and Igoe became combined as Pruitt-Igoe, and Darst and Webbe became
Darst-Webbe. The largest of these projects was the most infamous: the 57-acre Pruitt-Igoe
project on the citys north side, which had a total of 2,910 units in 33 11-story high-rises
designed by Hellmuth, Yamasaki & Leinweber. All of the other projects were based on high-rise
plans, favored by Mayor Joseph Darst although originally opposed by city planner Harland
Bartholomew.11 The accelerated development in St. Louis not only fulfilled the 1947
Ibid.
Alexander Von Hoffman, Why They Built Pruitt-Igoe, From Tenements to the Taylor Homes: In Search of an Urban
Housing Policy in Twentieth-Century America (Pennsylvania State University Press. 2000), p.184.
5
Ibid.
6
Von Hoffman, p. 185.
7
Goetz, p. 121.
8
Colin Gordon, Mapping Decline: St. Louis and the Fate of the American City (Philadelphia: University of
Pennsylvania Press, 2008), p. 99.
9
Robert Beauregard, Voices of Decline (New York: Routledge, 2003), p. 113.
10
Von Hoffman, p. 190.
11
Von Hoffman, p. 189.
4
Comprehensive Plans recommendations, but also provided room for what Bartholomew
anticipated would be major population growth in the city between 1950 and 1980.12
The citys first project submitted to the Public Housing Administration was the 12-building John
J. Cochran Garden Apartments (MO-1-3), located on five city blocks north of downtown (figure
4). The site engulfed the site of Neighborhood Gardens Apartments (1935; Hoener, Baum &
Froese; NR 1997), the citys earliest private mass housing project. SLHA hired the firm of
Hellmuth, Yamasaki & Leinweber to design the new $9.2 million project. The Detroit-based firm
had incorporated in 1949, and was helmed by native St. Louisan George Hellmuth, Minoru
Yamasaki and Joseph Leinweber. Yamasaki was the lead designer while Hellmuth handled
management.
For Cochran Gardens, the firm designed stark brick buildings with dumbbell plans centered on
double-loaded corridors set apart from each other on wide Corbusian lawns. Yet the project
featured innovations that would not be seen subsequently: each unit had an exterior balcony,
and the building forms were broken into four six-story, four seven-story and four twelve-story
buildings. Cochran Gardens won the 1953 Gold Medal of the St. Louis Chapter of the American
Institute of Architects as well as an Honorable Mention in the 1953 exhibition of the New York
Architectural League.13 No other Housing Act-funded project would receive any architectural
awards. Cochran Gardens was demolished between 2008 and 2012 under the HOPE VI
program.
Following Cochran Gardens, SLHA submitted plans for what would be its largest undertaking,
the adjacent Pruitt and Igoe projects. Together, the two projects occupied a 57-acre superblock
bounded by Carr, 20th, Cass and Jefferson avenues north of downtown, replacing a 25-block
African-American slum in the DeSoto-Carr neighborhood. Pruitt-Igoe, as the site became known
after SLHA combined the two developments, was the epitome of the Housing Acts inversion of
the public housing and slum housing clearance components. The 1947 city comprehensive plan
recommended total clearance and reconstruction of the DeSoto-Carr neighborhood, and the
Housing Act funds allowed both for fulfillment of the clearance and reconstruction through public
housing.
In 1949, SLHA presented the first plan for the Pruitt and Igoe projects: twelve 13-story buildings
with 1,000 units.14 Hellmuth, Yamasaki & Leinweber were the architects. Public protest led the
architects to rework the projects with 704 units distributed in six six-story, two seven-story and
four twelve-story building.15 The Public Housing Administration (PHA) and SLHA continued to
increase the size and density, however, assuming a demand based on relocation from other
areas in the citys slum clearance program.16 In 1951, Yamasaki presented a plan based on an
11-story tower form as well as 41 sets of two-story row houses; this plan would later be echoed
in the plan for the Arthur Blumeyer Homes. SLHA scrapped the row houses when construction
started in 1954. Thus, the Captain Wendell Oliver Pruitt Homes (MO-1-4) consisted of 20 11story towers containing 1,736 units, while the William L. Igoe Apartments (MO-1-5) consisted of
13 11-story towers containing 1,134 units.17 The towers were set in rows divided by 200 wide
lawns, creating a monolithic site plan reminiscent of the famous model of Plan Voisin (figure 5).
12
Beauregard, p. 117.
Lynn Josse, Historical Information on St. Louis Public Housing Developments, 1939-1965 (St. Louis: Landmarks
Association of St. Louis, 1999). Pages unnumbered.
14
Von Hoffman, p. 193.
15
Ibid.
16
Von Hoffman, p. 196-7.
17
Josse.
13
Yamasakis final building design devised a 180-wide slab tower unit (doubled for some
buildings), clad in plain brick and devoid of embellishment. Yamasaki avoided double-loaded
corridors in favor of a gallery plan that provided generous public hallways with south-facing
window banks. At the 4th, 7th and 10th floors these galleries were elevator lobbies for the skipstop elevators that avoided other floors. Perhaps the most innovative tendency in the Pruitt and
Igoe towers design lay in Yamasakis concept of the vertical neighborhood: using the skipstop elevators to widen circulation so that residents might interact with more of their neighbors.
The towers otherwise were reduced to functional elements: bare concrete block walls, concrete
floors, plain metal windows, small room sizes and even exposed services in some areas. PHAs
orders for cost efficiencies in construction still led to a $60 million construction cost for both
projects.
The Pruitt project opened in 1955, and the Igoe project opened in 1956. The capacity for 15,000
residents was never realized, with peak occupancy being around 12,000 in 1957 ahead of a
permanent decline. Also, the St. Louis Housing Authority enforced racial segregation in its
projects, and intended the Igoe homes (placed adjacent to white areas on the citys north side)
for whites and the Pruitt homes for African-Americans. However, the Igoe homes did not attract
enough white residents for full occupancy, so SLHA then decided to mix occupancy.18 Yet the
other projects remained segregated (Clinton-Peabody and Cochran for whites, Carr Square
Village for blacks) even after the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision by the United
States Supreme Court mandated the end of segregation in public facilities. A successful lawsuit
by tenants led to a St. Louis Circuit Court order to SLHA to desegregate public housing in
December 1955. Subsequently, white population fell precipitously in all projects until it became
almost non-existent.
Pruitt-Igoe would be demolished between 1972 and 1977, after years of publicized decline
following better early days (figure 6). By the day that the last tower fell, the projects had become
symbols of utopian modernism to critics, with the dominant perspective summed up by architect
and theorist Charles Jencks: It was designed in a purist language at odds with the architectural
codes of the inhabitants.19 Yamasakis own perspective did not address the aesthetics of the
projects, but echoes the scorn. Yamasaki wrote in 1972 that I am perfectly willing to admit that
of the buildings we have been involved with over the years, I hate this one the most. There are
few others, but I dont hate them; I just dislike them.20 The backlash against modernist design
for public housing ultimately culminated in the HOPE VI program that led to St. Louis demolition
of all of its 1949 Housing Act towers. However, the modernist designs of the Turnkey-era towers
indicate that SLHA did not place the blame for Pruitt-Igoes downfall on architectural modernism.
While Pruitt and Igoe were under construction in 1954, the St. Louis Housing Authority
submitted plans for the George L. Vaughn Homes (MO-1-6) immediately to the east across 20th
Street (figure 5). Also designed by Hellmuth, Yamasaki & Leinweber, the four nine-story Vaughn
buildings were much different. The masses were broken into segments arranged in multi-wing
groups with open vertical breezeways. Vaughns buildings were otherwise functionally modern,
and served as the model for the later Darst project in south St. Louis. Completed in 1957, the
656-unit Vaughn project had an $8.7 million budget showing a much more economical
construction rate than Pruitt-Igoe.21 Later, when SLHA elected to include elderly-only buildings
18
19
9.
20
21
at all projects, the Authority built an additional eight-story tower at Vaughn in 1963. Designed by
Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum, the elderly tower was a rectangular, modernist building similar
to the same type of building just built at the Webbe Apartments (1961). The entire Vaughn
project was demolished between 1998 and 2006 under the HOPE VI program.
The four nine-story towers of the Joseph M. Darst Apartments (MO-1-7) on 14th Street south of
downtown essentially repeated the Vaughn design on a smaller site (figure 7). Hellmuth,
Yamasaki & Leinweber designed the project, which included a relatively sophisticated (and
largely unrealized) landscape program by noted landscape architect Emmett J. Layton. Plans
date to 1954, the same year as Vaughn, and construction ended in 1957. The buff brick
buildings cost around $9 million to build.22 Darst also had 656 units of housing. The influence of
Corbusiers towers in a park concept was evident at Darst: on a 14.11-acre site, the building
footprints consumed only 1.7 acres, or 8.3 percent of the site.23 The remainder of the site was
left for landscaped open space and automobile parking.
SLHA followed this project with essentially an addition, the Anthony M. Webbe Apartments (MO1-7A) completed in 1961 on the superblock to the north (figure 8). Hellmuth, Obata &
Kassabaum, local successor to Hellmuth, Yamasaki & Leinweber, designed the four-building
group that included two nine-story towers similar to the Darst buildings, an eight-story elderly
apartment building and a 12-story tower.24 Designs date to 1958. Late Darst and Webbe were
merged into Darst-Webbe, following the convention set by Pruitt-Igoe. HOPE VI funds allowed
the St. Louis Housing Authority to demolish Darst-Webbe in 1999.
By the time that the sixth high-rise public Title III housing project rose in the city, the reality that
modern design alone could not provide for the citys poorest residents had already become
apparent to social scientists. By 1960, SLHAs resident population was nearly 100% AfricanAmerican. Vacancy at Pruitt-Igoe stood at 9 percent in 1957, and 16 percent in 1960. While the
Public Housing Administration provided SLHA with funds to build gleaming new towers, it
provided inadequate funds for ongoing maintenance. The costs of the modern buildings
outweighed revenues greatly: between 1948 and 1953, SLHA rent revenue rose 10 percent
while operations costs rose 101 percent, and between 1954 and 1963 rents rose 50 percent
while operations costs rose 300 percent.25
As vacancy rose, SLHA revenues fell, leading to a catastrophic ratio between operations costs
and rental income. SLHA could find little sources of funding to cover the gap, which were not
anticipated by the Housing Act. At Pruitt-Igoe specifically, a downward spiral of poor upkeep,
resident abandonment, high crime and general unrest culminated in the nations first public
housing rent strike in 1969. SLHAs best efforts did little to change the decline. Meanwhile, St.
Louis was losing population and total demand for housing in the city was falling, contradicting
city planners predictions of huge gains.
The last local project funded under Title III was a large project north of Midtown St. Louis named
the Arthur Blumeyer Homes. Completed in 1966, the Blumeyer Homes was the first public
housing project in St. Louis outside of areas adjacent to downtown.26 Blumeyer also was a
22
Ibid.
Darst and Vaughn Mass Housing Projects to Be Dedicated This Afternoon, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 28 April
1957.
24
Ibid.
25
Eugene V. Meehan, Public Housing Policy: Convention Versus Reality (New Brunswick,N.J.: Center for Urban
Policy Research, Rutgers University, 1975), p. 71.
26
City Plan Commission, p. 19.
23
departure from the architectural forms that SLHA had pursued before. Instead of rows of towers,
Blumeyers 1,300 units were placed in two 15-story towers, three 14-story towers and 42 twostory buildings containing 288 row houses for families (figure 9). Architects Joseph Murphy and
Eugene Mackey, soon to be renowned for their design of the Climatron at the Missouri Botanical
Garden, designed Blumeyer. While the tower forms were derivative of the rectangular, doubleloaded corridor plans found earlier at Cochran, the townhouses were a new form for SLHA
(figure 10).
When Blumeyer was on the drawing boards, Pruitt-Igoes ailments occupied much of SLHAs
time. SLHA had first approached HUD for additional funds to improve Pruitt-Igoe in 1958, and
finally received a large grant in 1965.27 By 1967, SLHA Acting Executive Director Thomas P.
Costello would ask HUD for funds to start demolition of towers at Pruitt-Igoe. SLHA leaders
envisioned Blumeyer as a project that would avoid the failure of Pruitt-Igoe, architecturally and
socially. In 1966, SLHA Executive Director Claude Miller told reporters that he hoped that
Blumeyer would attract the type of low-income family that cherishes the same values that are
found in families that have made it.28 While eventually Blumeyer would be demolished through
the HOPE VI program starting in 2006, its mix of low-rise townhouses and high-rise buildings
would be a turning point for public housing architecture in St. Louis. SLHAs subsequent use of
the Turnkey program would follow Blumeyers lead.
The St. Louis Housing Authority requested financial assistance for a number of projects in
November of 1967, very soon after the Turnkey program was created at HUD. HUD informed
SLHA that there was not much money at the moment except for projects that could provide
occupancy by September 1968, but that they were sure more money would be allocated in July
of 1968 and were confidant there would be funding for further Turnkey Projects to be built.29 The
availability of Turnkey funds shifted SLHAs housing development program to the new source of
funding.
Meanwhile, as clearance and public housing dollars dwindled, civic leaders in St. Louis and
around the nation still fought to clear blighted neighborhoods. Yet large-scale projects were
under attack by civil rights and housing rights advocates, preservationists and elected officials.
Cities retreated from the planning that the 1949 Housing Act had enabled. As historian Robert
Beauregard writes, by the late 1960s urban renewal seemed less and less a panacea.30 In St.
Louis, the conditions of the Pruitt-Igoe project were documented again and again, showing the
limitations of public housing as well as the consequences if overcrowding. SLHA responded to
the changes in the era by pursuing scattered-site housing under the Turnkey program.
High-Rise Residential Architecture in St. Louis, 1948-1969
By the time that St. Louis Housing Authority embarked upon the Turnkey tower developments,
very few residential high-rises had risen in the city aside from public housing towers. In fact,
most of the additional towers were developed through urban redevelopment corporations
utilizing federal financial assistance, making them kindred in purpose to public housing
developments. All of these towers architects embraced modernism in their design, but the
stylistic traits are diverse. With the exception of several private projects located in the Central
27
West End and Forest Park, these towers all stand downtown or in the Mill Creek Valley urban
renewal area.
There are many similarities between the public housing high-rises examined in this study and
contemporary private and subsidized non-SLHA housing towers built in the city. Multi-story,
rectangular flat-roofed forms and concrete slab construction unite almost all high-rise residential
construction in the city between 1948 and 1969. All residential towers relied on the vocabulary
of the Modern Movement in American architecture, although formal expressions varied. Some
private towers provided greater fenestration and more generous personal balconies, while
others were remarkably similar to public housing towers. Interior layouts and ceiling heights
were not greatly dissimilar across different types.
The first postwar residential high-rise built in St. Louis was the Ford Apartments (1948; Preston
J. Bradshaw; NR 2005) at 1405 Pine Street, built as part of the citys efforts to renew the area
around the earlier Memorial Plaza downtown (completed in 1938). Following the passage of the
1947 Comprehensive Plan, business leaders sought opportunities to rid downtown of slums
and erect new mass housing projects. Before the enactment of the United States Housing Act,
funding was limited to local mechanisms. Businessman James Ford led the citys Anti-Slum
Commission to press for a $16 million bond issue that allowed for construction of apartment
towers around downtown.31
The only building realized by the issue was the 14-story, 104-unit building that would bear
Fords name. The buildings minimal ornamentation, red brick rise, plain steel windows, low floor
heights and economically-sized units presaged the public housing towers built after 1949 (figure
11). The next high-rise apartment building in the city was the Ambassador Apartments at 5340
Delmar Boulevard (1952), designed by Isadore Shank. The 12-story red-brick slab high rise
featured cantilevered concrete balconies on its main elevation, making it somewhat similar in
appearance to the Cochran towers.
In the late 1960s, two larger downtown residential redevelopment projects were enabled by use
of new public blighting and financing mechanisms. The first of these was the Plaza Square
Apartments (1961; NR 2007), which was part of the ongoing effort to develop the western
downtown areas adjacent to Memorial Plaza. In 1950, city leaders formed an Urban
Redevelopment Corporation to acquire rights to redevelop four blocks west of 15th Street for
middle-class housing.32 Initially architect Harris Armstrong was the architect, and he proposed
two massive, long slab towers on the site. By 1958, the design charge passed to Hellmuth,
Obata & Kassabaum.33 Gyo Obata reworked Armstrongs plan into a Corbusian landscape of six
13-story slab towers set around historic churches and landscaped areas (figure 12). The towers
were functionally similar to Cochran Gardens buildings: double-loaded corridors, low ceilings,
plain finishes in the units and cantilevered balconies. However, Plaza Squares facades were
punctuated by colorful enamel panels devised by Alexander Girard, making each building
visually distinct and playful as opposed to the somber monotone of the citys public housing
towers.
The Mansion House Center (1967; Schwarz & Van Hoefen), located between Third and Fourth
streets facing the new Jefferson National Expansion Memorial, was enabled by a
31
Carolyn Hewes Toft, Stacy Sone and Matt Bivens, National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form: Ford
Apartments (Washington, D.C.: National Park Service, 2005), p. 8-9.
32
Carolyn Hewes Toft and Michael Allen, National Register of Historic Places Nomination: Plaza Square Apartments
(Washington, D.C.: National Park Service, 2007), p. 8-18.
33
Toft and Allen, p. 8-31.
redevelopment plan under Missouris Chapter 353 Urban Redevelopment Act.34 The city created
the redevelopment plan in 1959, and in 1967 completed the complex of three 28-story
residential towers, three low-rise office buildings and a long parking structure with rooftop
sculpture garden. Schwarz & Van Hoefens concrete slab towers showed International style
influences in glass lobbies, gridded curtain walls and thin cantilevered balconies. As with Plaza
Square, city officials hoped that Mansion House would lure middle-class residents downtown,
but high vacancy was a problem from the start.35
Starting in 1959, the City of St. Louis cleared 454 acres of the Mill Creek Valley area. The Mill
Creek Urban Renewal Project used $7 million raised through a 1955 bond issue and $21 million
in funds from the United States Housing Act authorization to clear the area and plan the new
neighborhood.36 New high-rise residential towers were part of the master plan developed by
Schwarz & Van Hoefen. The firm designed two apartment towers now named the Marchetti
Towers (1964) near the intersection of Grand Avenue and Forest Park Boulevard that showed
International style influences, with folded wall sections of glass and metal panels breaking up
the otherwise plain slab forms. The 19-story Heritage House tower at 2800 Olive Street (1967;
Pearce & Pearce) was an essay in contrasting brick tones and differentiated massing (figure
13).
The largest Mill Creek towers were the two built as part of Council Plaza (1965-1969; NR 2009),
a mixed-use project developed by the Teamsters Union Local 688 that included office and retail
space and a gas station. Designed by Schwarz & Van Hoefen, the towers consist of a 16-story
building built in 1964 and a 27-story building built in 1968 set perpendicular to each other on site
(figure 14). The towers have similar articulation through a functionalist concrete grid, window
ribbons and blind end walls adorned with sculptural elements. The Housing Act of 1959
authorized a federal loan program to develop elderly housing in cities known more widely for its
title, Section 202. The Council Plaza project successfully obtained a loan from the Housing and
Home Finance Agency under the Senior Citizens Housing Loan Program to build the towers.37
In the period that the public housing towers rose across the city, private developers built only a
few high-rise apartment buildings that demonstrate no dominant preferred style. Two apartment
towers were built on lots on Skinker Boulevard facing Forest Parks western edge. The 17-story
tower at 801 South Skinker (1961; Architectural Design Associates) demonstrates a design
vocabulary borrowing from the International style with a passing reference to glass-skinned
towers by architect Mies Van Der Rohe. The buildings concrete floor plates are articulated
through segmental projections that divide banks of full-height windows. The base features a
glass-walled lobby set behind tile-clad columns that are far too thick and cloaked to be true
pilotis. The tower at 801 South Skinker featured custom-designed interiors and its units were
always sold as condominiums.38
To the north, the 23-story Dorchester Apartments (1963; S.J. Kessler & Sons, Robert Elkington)
at 665 S. Skinker Boulevard housed smaller rental units with fewer frills. Each unit has a
balcony patio cantilevered from the body.39 The Dorchester Apartments monolithic brick
cladding and balconies compares to the SLHA Housing Act projects. Two towers on the other
34
Gordon, p 163.
Gordon, p. 167.
36
Melinda Winchester, National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form: Council Plaza (Washington, D.C.:
National Park Service, 2009), p. 8-19.
37
Winchester, p. 8-21.
38
George McCue, The Building Art in St. Louis: Two Centuries (St. Louis: Knight Publishing Company, 1981), p. 81.
39
Ibid.
35
side of the park located on Kingshighway Boulevard from the 1950s, the Montclair and the Parc
Frontenac, exhibit similar monolithic cladding but have more differentiated massing.
Another private apartment tower is the Lindell Terrace (1963; Hellmuth Obata & Kassabaum) at
4501 Lindell Boulevard in the Central West End (figure 15). Lindell Terraces designer was Gyo
Obata, who had served as project manager on the Pruitt and Igoe projects and whose firm
designed the Darst and Webbe projects. The 15-story tower was a luxurious contrast to the
firms public housing projects, although its modernist sensibilities were equally strong. Lindell
Terrace sits upon a raised plaza, has a base of Texas marble and a body of buff brick, and has
recessed integral balcony porches at each corner. Lindell Terrace presents an austere formality
befitting its prominent location on a major street. The tower was part of a larger effort to
reconstruct Lindell Boulevard in the postwar era that produced many Modern Movement
buildings between Grand and Kingshighway.40
On the block east of Lindell Terrace, two additional private high-rise apartment buidlings rose in
the 1960s. The 12-story Jackson Arms at 4482 Lindell (1964; Sommerich & Woods) is a
concrete slab-floored building with a prominent circulation tower and entrance facing the street,
but a simple brick body with a grid of windows on its secondary elevations. More prominently
sited is the 21-story Towne House at 4400 Lindell (1965; A.K. Salkowitz), which occupies the
southwest corner of Lindell and Newstead avenues facing the Cathedral Basillica. Towne House
compares to the Dorchester Apartments in its plain brick rise and its prominent balconies, but its
base features a patterned concrete block screen and a cantilevered thin-shell concrete canopy
following the curve of its entrance drive (figure 16).
HUD Creates the Turnkey Program, 1966
During the age of housing projects developed under Title III of the United States Housing Act,
alternatives were tried in some cities. Philadelphia developed a Used House program in which
the Public Housing Administration financed the rehabilitation or construction of over 5,000 units
of scattered row-houses in distressed neighborhoods.41 Philadelphias program utilized federal
financing for private developers that ultimately sold their completed projects to the local housing
authority. The Philadelphia program provided a key precedent for the new Turnkey program
initiated by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) in 1966.
President Lyndon Johnson appointed Robert C. Weaver Secretary of HUD on January 18,
1966. Two days later, Weaver announced an experimental public housing program called
Turnkey.42 Turnkey public housing projects marked a shift in the way that HUD handled lowincome housing problems throughout the United States. Under the Turnkey program, the local
housing authorities would contract for development of new units with private developers.
Developers of public housing would produce the units on their own land, with payment coming
through sale of completed units to the local housing authority.43 The name turnkey came from
the idea that a completed building would be ready for occupancy immediately upon sale to a
local housing authority.
40
Karen Bode Baxter, Tim Maloney and Michael Allen, National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form: Bel-Air
Motel (Washington, D.C.: National Park Service, 2009), p. 8-22.
41
Joseph Burstein, New Techniques in Public Housing, Law and Contemporary Problems 32 (Summer 1967), p.
529.
42
Ibid.
43
Burstein, p. 530.
In 1967, legal scholar Joseph Burstein wrote that, Although simple in concept, the Turnkey
system completely reverses the traditional method of producing public housing44 Local
housing authorities using Turnkey would not have to handle site acquisition (or clearance
working with local land clearance authorities), architect selection or competitive bidding and
award all activities that increased administrative costs for authorities like SLHA. HUD
embraced private development entities that had experience in creating building projects based
on profit structures that could prove more efficient, resulting in savings in public housing
development.45 Developers could submit proposals for project the local housing authority was
looking to build, and the authority would select which proposal suited it best. The authority
issued a letter of intent to purchase the finished project, and the authority would agree to buy
the finished product if the developer fulfilled the terms. The burden for completion rested with
the developer, who would have to fully finish a building before realizing any profit.
HUD authorized the first amendment to the program in August 1967, when President Johnson
announced Turnkey II. Turnkey II was a pilot program that allowed local housing authorities to
hire private managerial staff to manage public housing buildings purchased under the original
Turnkey (now Turnkey I) program.46 Again, HUD emphasized the efficiency of privatization and
the goal of reducing operating costs of public housing on local authorities. Many, like SLHA,
were straining to manage the United States Housing Act-funded projects for which Turnkey II
could not legally be used.
HUD authorized Turnkey III in September of 1967 to create private ownership for low-income
families.47 Under Turnkey III, families could provide a combination of sweat equity and income
sufficient to cover basic maintenance costs to purchase their units. Turnkey III projects still were
privately developed, bought by the local housing authority and then leased to tenants with an
option to purchase.48 The genesis of Turnkey III idea was a housing plan implemented on Indian
Reservations in 1962.49 Turnkey III intended to have the effect of creating pride in ones home
and an emotional as well as financial ownership of that home.
Turnkey Public Housing Underway in St. Louis
SLHAs Acting Executive Director Thomas P. Costello sought to utilize the Turnkey program to
continue developing public housing in St. Louis. Upon SLHAs request, the Board of Aldermen
authorized SLHAs application for 3,000 units of Turnkey housing.50 Costello would later state in
a speech that the Turnkey program would help address the stigma of earlier failures. We think
that these Turnkey projects very definitely prove that all public housing is not Pruitt-Igoe, stated
Costello in 1971. Costellos tone matches the intent of Weaver and Turnkey framers: to shift
public housing away from concentrated tower projects and into scattered sites seen to be easier
to manage with more benefit to tenants.
SLHAs Turnkey efforts were modest compared to its aggressive and nationally-recognized use
of the United States Housing Act funds. In 1970, developers started building 526 Turnkey
44
Burstein, p. 530.
Ibid.
46
Burstein, p. 536.
47
Burstein, p. 538.
48
Ibid.
49
Burstein, p. 539.
50
Thomas P. Costello, Public Housing Consultation: Remarks Concerning Turnkey Proposals, speech delivered 23
September 1971.
45
projects around the United States, inclusive of 48,400 housing units.51 St. Louis started 192
units, most of which were in the towers studied for this project. In comparison, East St. Louis
started construction of 768 units, Kansas City started 200 units and Indianapolis started 206.52
Costello wanted greater growth, and blamed the City Plan Commissions housing policies for
slowing the construction of Turnkey projects.
A City Plan Commission study from 1970 estimated that the city had a deficiency of 17,000 lowrent dwelling units.53 Yet SLHA observed that the City Plan Commissions own program would
only lead to building 900 units per year, of which only 400 would be Turnkey units.54 SLHA
challenged the City Plan Commission housing development program, in 1972 noting that the
program would never match demand for public housing. Federal Housing Administration
estimates showed that from July 1970 and July 1972, St. Louis had a Turnkey occupancy
potential of 3,730 units (1,200 for elderly in towers).55 SLHA developed fewer than 1,800
Turnkey units in that period.
SLHA was in communication with St. Louis Civic Alliance for Housing about projects under way
in STL and the hesitance to start new projects before finishing the ones already in progress.
SLHA felt this public stance was making private developers nervous that St. Louis would not
build as many Turnkey housing units because of it. Yet Mayor Alfonso Cervantes administration
tried to assuage the Alliance by taking a conservative stance on further Turnkey development,
which Cervantes though should happen only after existing projects under construction were built
and occupied.56
The reality of St. Louis housing conditions seemed to suggest, however, that Costellos view of
Turnkey housing production was correct. According to HUD, St. Louis housing problems were
among the nations worst in 1972. Assistant Secretary Norman Watson told the Wall Street
Journal that [t]he inner city of St. Louis is the furthest along (of all major US cities) on the scale
of economic decline.57 HUD rated 29% (70,1000 units) of the citys housing stock as poor and
40% (84,400 units) as only fair.58
Turnkey Towers in St. Louis, 1968-1972
The towers built under the Turnkey program today remain as the last public housing towers in
St. Louis, and thus have potentially significant historic and architectural associations. Whether
these towers are exceptionally significant to warrant National Register of Historic Places
designation before turning 50 years old is uncertain, and requires individual property
evaluations. However categorically the social history of the Turnkey towers suggests local
significance based on association with SLHAs effort to reinvent public housing in the wake of
management failures at Pruitt-Igoe and other earlier high-rise developments.
By March of 1972, nine Turnkey towers had been completed. These buildings included 827
housing units. Additionally, four buildings with 740 units were under construction and four more
51
Construction Reports: Housing Starts (Washington, D.C.: Department of Commerce, 1971), p. 19.
Construction Reports: Housing Starts, p. 20.
53
St. Louis Housing Authority, Housing Plan (1972), p. 9.
54
Ibid.
55
Ibid.
56
Alphonso J. Cervantes, Letter to Arthur Klein, 12 September 1970.
57
Monroe W. Karmin, St. Louis: Can the Decay Be Stopped?, Wall Street Journal, 2 March 1972.
58
Ibid.
52
buildings with 207 units were in various stages of planning or negotiations.59 The five projects
included in this study were built between the years of 1969 and 1972. SLHA policy placed
elderly residents in high-rise projects and families in low-rise, multi-bedroom townhouse or
apartment units. This strategy followed the implementation of a similar plan at the Blumeyer
Homes, although only one project (Euclid Plaza) actually combined the two types of housing on
one site. Generally, the Turnkey program shows the separation of elderly and family housing
across the city.
The placement of public housing towers in the Turnkey era different sharply from the policy
pursued by SLHA previously. Earlier developments all were built in area identified by the City
Plan Commission as having poor quality housing, making the public housing a utopian
replacement. The five Turnkey towers built between 1967 and 1972 demonstrated avoidance of
matching these new buildings with areas whose housing had been identified as the citys worst.
Two (Parkview and West Pine) were built in areas ranked as having good housing, one (St.
James) was built where housing was fair below average, one (Euclid Plaza) was built where
housing was fair above average and only one (Kingsbury Terrace) was built where housing
was rated as poor.60 None was built inside of any official redevelopment area, and all were far
outside of the citys core where urban renewal clearance efforts were still underway.
Architecturally, the five towers built in these years were not greatly significant. The previous
wave of high-rise public housing towers in St. Louis represented the work significant architects
including Minoru Yamasaki and Joseph Murphy, and demonstrated national attention through
publication of designs in Architectural Record and other publications. The Turnkey projects were
developed by private builders who did not have the larger public budgets of the Public Housing
Administration, so the cost savings shown by using less well-known designers is not
remarkable.
None of the Turnkey towers appeared in national publications, and none is included in George
McCues The Building Art in St. Louis, whose 1981 edition was a capstone to the modern era.
Among the designers, Peckham & Guyton and Schwarz & Van Hoefen were prominent
designers whose work was widely-published. Peckham & Guytons design for Euclid Plaza is
the most distinct of the group, and represents the use of the Brutalist style, which was not widely
adopted for residential architecture in St. Louis. Despite lack of stylistic coherence and overall
architectural importance, however, the slab towers from this period do represent SLHAs
continuation of preference toward Modern Movement design for new projects.
The first Turnkey project that the St. Louis Housing Authority completed was Euclid Plaza (or
Turnkey Project MO 1-13) located at 5300 North Euclid Ave (figures 18-21). It was developed by
the Urban Improvement Corporation, and included 82 townhouses, one right-story high-rise
building with 140 apartments, and one community building.61 The St. Louis Housing Authority
purchased Euclid Plaza in July of 1970 for $4,205,386.62 Euclid Plaza was designed by the
best-known architects to work on a Turnkey project, the relatively young local firm of Peckham &
Guyton.
At Euclid Plaza, the high-rise apartments were designed as housing for the elderly. The
buildings upper stories have small apartments, while the first floor provides offices for the
59
management staff, community space, including and arts & crafts room, a large multi-purpose
room, conference rooms, bathrooms and a lounge.63 The 3 or 4 bedroom, family townhouses
were set off of Euclid, behind the high-rise. By January of 1972, Euclid Plaza was 100%
occupied. In February of 1972, a progress report given to Mr. Costello explained that the care of
the Euclid Plaza complex was in the hands of the Laclede Town Group, who had hired a
Maintenance Man to live in the high rise and make sure all of the pumps, boilers and other
general mechanics were functioning.64
St. James A.M.E. Church (or St. James Chapel), a historically African-American church in The
Ville, developed and later managed the James House (or Turnkey Project MO1-10), located at
Pendleton and St. Ferdinand avenues (figures 22-25). The completed building, designed by
noted local firm Schwarz & Van Hoefen, was ten stories tall and contained 99 efficiency units,
55 one bedroom units and 1 two bedroom unit. Like the Euclid Plaza high-rise, James House
always was intended as housing for senior citizens. Amenities in this building include outdoor
recreation area, community rooms, arts and crafts room, kitchen, laundry and senior safety
features. It was completed in December of 1970 and cost $2,620,065.65
The large construction project of the James House was awarded to Reliance Construction Co.
who would later be charged with discriminatory hiring practices and spur a change in the SLHA
regulations for future developers contracted to build Turnkey Projects. Reliance was not found
to be in violation of federal regulations in place at the time, but it did bring up the serious need
for an increase in equal economic opportunity in areas suffering from abandonment of people
and industry, areas that needed this housing.
The Civic Alliance for Housing and the SLHA set up public forums to reach an agreement on
how to increase the number of African Americans employed in the construction of these
projects. They hoped for a partnership between whites and blacks, to help foster sharing of
knowledge, experience and resources.66 SLHA decided that contractors must show how they
will involve Negroes in building public housing projects before contracts are awarded.67
The first contractors to propose a development following these racial guidelines was Creative
Communities Inc. They proposed that African Americans will receive at least thirty percent of
the general contract jobs, a minimum of thirty percent of the subcontracting, the general
contractor would have to sign the St. Louis Plan which sets aside training slots for Negroes on
construction work, and finally materials would be required to be purchased from businesses
that observe equal employment regulations.68 This project was approved and came to be
known as the West Pine (or Turnkey Project MO1-17). It was completed in November of 1971,
cost $2,135,300 and is comprised of 128 senior citizen apartments in a ten story building on the
corner of Taylor and West Pine. The first floor is a community area that includes a multipurpose
room, arts and crafts room, kitchen space, library, and managerial offices.69
While the West Pine Apartments were underway, Kingsbury Terrace (Turnkey project MO1-18)
had opened at 5655 Kingsbury Avenue in March 1971 (figures 26-30). Designed by Philadelphia
architect Stanford G. Brooks, the building was an eleven story apartment building for the elderly,
63
Euclid Plaza.
Progress Report, Private Management of Turnkey Housing, Inter-Office Communication, St. Louis Housing
Authority, 15 February 1972.
65
James House. St. Louis Housing Authority, 1969.
66
E.S. Evans, Turnkey Job Plan for Blacks, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 19 April 1970, p. 3A.
67
Authority to Require Negro Contractor Role, St. Louis Globe-Democrat, 22 April 1970.
68
Negro Share in Project Spelled Out, St. Louis Globe-Democrat, 6 May 1970, p. 4A.
69
West Pine (St. Louis Housing Authority, 1970).
64
divided into 87 efficiency units and 60 one bedroom units.70 Amenities include an outdoor
recreation area, community rooms, common kitchen, arts and crafts room, conference room,
laundry, managerial offices and senior safety features. SLHA hired the Lipton Company to take
over the management of the complex. A February 1972 SLHA memorandum stated that
Bethesda Temple was providing programs such as arts and crafts, a drama club and medical
services for residents and that Lipton Groups performance was satisfactory. General success of
private management and community involvement was apparent in at least at the early stages of
this housing complex.71
Parkview Apartments (Turnkey Project MO1-19) sits at 4451 Forest Park Avenue and is a
thirteen story building providing housing for the elderly that was finished in December of 1972
(figures 31-35). Apartments are divided into 299 efficiency units, 96 one bedroom units and 2
two bedroom units and community amenities include a patio, laundry room, community rooms,
offices and a kitchen. Two two-bedroom apartments served as residence for the manager and
the maintenance employee.72 The slab building had the most distinct plan of any SLHA highrise, with a center service column flanked by angled outward-projecting wings.
The final tower completed under the Turnkey program was Warwood (Turnkey Project MO 124), an eight-story building built by developer James E. Hurt, Jr. as part of a project that also
included 29 townhouse units.73 The Warwood tower provided 95 units of elderly housing divided
into 64 efficiencies and 31 1-bedroom units. The building included a community room, laundry,
an arts and crafts room and other amenities. Warwood was programmatically similar to Euclid
Plaza, with units on a double-loaded corridor and an exterior expressed through a concrete grid
(figure 17). The St. Louis Housing Authority first included Warwood on its Turnkey production
reports in 1971, but the building was not completed and purchased until 1973. The St. Louis
Housing Authority no longer owns Warwood, but retains the other five Turnkey towers.
The St. Louis Housing Authority and Turnkey Projects After 1974
In 1972, the SLHA Housing Plan reported that $119.6 million had been spent on building
Turnkey housing, with an additional $18 million in projects under construction.74 Over half of the
citys new housing between 1969 and 1972 (51.5%) came from SLHA Turnkey projects.75
According to SLHA, each unit of Turnkey housing had generated $17,000 in new construction
jobs, job training and material purchases. According to SLHA, 29% of renters and 18% of all
households had an after-tax income of less than $5,000, qualifying for public housing.
Additionally, half of the citys elderly population qualified for public housing.76
Yet the Turnkey program had begun facing local complaints in 1972. Given high demand for
units, SLHA implemented an intensive and competitive interview process for potential tenants.
Some critics accused SLHA as trying to a halting of low-income citizens being placed in public
housing completely.77 The requirement that Turnkey developments be mixed income, severely
restricted the number families on welfare being accepted into these buildings. SLHA used this
70
mixed-income model to help prevent problems seen in areas where large numbers of the very
poor are concentrated, but with this policy came a very large lack of housing stock available to
members of the city living on welfare. SLHA did often deny occupancy in Turnkey projects to
families who survived solely on their welfare income.78
Unit size was another common complaint from residents. Many of the families in need of
housing needed between three and six bedrooms to accommodate the size of their families, yet
most of the developed housing units were only one to four room apartments, so the number of
large families living in dwellings in which they didnt fit was quite substantial. Still other families
were evicted, were never accepted into the program or were denied by managers because
there were too many people to occupy the apartments available. Costello maintained that the
SLHA could not be responsible for solving all of the citys problems and stated that they were
doing the best they could in trying to create a decent solution to a many layered problem.79
SLHA Director Costello struck a cautious tone in a letter to United States Representative Leonor
K. Sullivan sent in January 1972. Costello wrote that the SLHA had entered into contracts with a
number of private companies that have been successful at managing past Turnkey Projects
because the authority did not have enough resources to run them in a way that would keep
them from falling into disrepair and failing like some of the earlier housing projects.80 Costello
maintained that SLHA was optimistic that Turnkey projects would also residents and community
members to be more a part of the conversation and could create more ownership.
According to the letter, more than four thousand people applied for residence in the new
Turnkey projects and therefore spurred a tighter screening process that included interviews.
This new screening process was also transferred to filtering applications for older, more
traditional low-income housing, but the SLHA found the demand for these places was not high
because of their dismal physical condition. Mr. Costello wrote that the Authority recognizes the
need to make all public housing a decent livable environment for all low-income citizens.81
Although not always avoiding criticism, SLHA was able to use the Turnkey program as the
opportunity to attempt new management techniques. Costello and housing manager T.J. Walsh
pursued private management contracts for all projects. Walsh wrote to Costello in March 1972
stating that We see turnkey [sic] in a transition stage, i.e., from our direct management to
private management.82 Walsh noted that some of the new contracts were too new to evaluate,
but suggested that success was likely. Walsh states that private management would eliminate
the need for SLHA to have large administrative and maintenance staffs.83 Reduction of
operating expenses, Walsh and Costello would come to agree, could avoid the issues that
clouded projects like Pruitt-Igoe that chronically suffered from the need for SLHA to carry high
overhead.
City officials outside SLHA observed the Turnkey program as a positive change in public
housing. The City Plan Commissions interim comprehensive plan Saint Louis Development
Program, published in 1975, gave the Turnkey towers received high marks. The report states
78
Ibid.
Ibid.
80
Thomas P. Costello, Letter to the Honorable Leonor K. Sullivan, 25 January 1972.
81
Ibid.
82
Employee Evaluation Reports and Analysis of Turnkey Operation, SLHA Inter-Office Communication, 16 March
1972.
83
Ibid.
79
that projects consisting of only high-rise buildings were acknowledged disasters.84 The City
Plan Commission praised Blumeyer and Turnkey projects for advancing a successful
alternative: In contrast, low-rise family projects and high-rise developments exclusively for
elderly tenants have met with a marked degree of success.85 Yet the City Plan Commission
never adopted SLHAs proposal to annually produce 2,200 new housing units through the
Turnkey program, which could have accounted for 60% of new occupancy potential citywide.86
By 1974, SLHA had completed six high-rise or tower buildings along with low-rise projects for
families at Hamilton-Julian, Taylor and McMillan and on Cabanne Avenue and low-rise elderly
projects on Lafayette and California avenues.87 The geographic dispersal of these projects
corresponded to social needs as well as ongoing SLHA interest in avoiding concentrations of
projects. SLHA continued to press for Turnkey development, citing the results of early
construction and ongoing demand, but changes in HUD policy caused the Turnkey program to
sunset after 1974.
Congress already had passed the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1970, which created
the Federal Experimental Housing Allowance Program to authorize more funds for moderateincome household rent supplements. Finally, the Housing and Community Development Act of
1974 amended the United States Housing Act of 1937 to create the Section 8 program. Under
the Section 8 program, tenants would pay 30 percent of their income for rental of housing, while
HUD supplied the rest of the rent through local housing authorities. There were no restrictions
on ownership of rented units, and Section 8 led to many families moving out of publicly-owned
or managed housing. Section 8 effectively replaced the Turnkey development program.
Meanwhile, in 1977 SLHA demolished the last tower at the notorious Pruitt-Igoe project, after
starting demolition the prior year.
Despite economic strength between the 1973-1975 and 1981-2 recessions, the federal
government did not greatly increase social welfare spending.88 The Nixon and Carter
administrations emphasized returning federal spending to local governments and continued
privatization of urban renewal efforts. The Turnkey program, which represented an earlier
attempt at privatization, did remain viable at HUD since it fit federal priorities. However, HUD
made no new sources of operating funding available to SLHA or local authorities in Americas
cities. St. Louis led the nations cities in population loss through the 1970s, with even its poor
moving out from the city.89 Yet demand for SLHA units remained strong after the Turnkey
towers were built.
In 1992, Congress authorized the HOPE (Housing Opportunities for People Everywhere) VI
program. HOPE VI funding for housing project upgrades is predicated on official standards that
have found most high-rise buildings unsuitable for continued occupancy. SLHA has used HOPE
VI funds to demolish all of its pre-Turnkey housing towers save one remaining tower at the
Blumeyer Homes slated for demolition. Upon the last Blumeyer towers demolition, the five
SLHA-owned Turnkey towers will be the only remaining high-rise public housing buildings in St.
Louis.
84
4. Bibliography
Authority to Require Negro Contractor Role, St. Louis Globe-Democrat, 22 April 1970.
Baxter, Karen Bode, Tim Maloney and Michael Allen, National Register of Historic Places
Nomination Form: Bel-Air Motel. Washington, D.C.: National Park Service, 2009.
Beauley, George M. Letter to Irvin Dagen, 8 December 1967.
Beauregard, Robert. Voices of Decline. New York: Routledge, 2003.
Burstein, Joseph. New Techniques in Public Housing. Law and Contemporary Problems 32
(Summer 1967).
Cervantes, Alphonso J. Letter to Arthur Klein, 12 September 1970.
City Plan Commission. Saint Louis Development Program. 1973.
Construction Reports: Housing Starts. Washington, D.C.: Department of Commerce, 1971.
Costello, Thomas P. Public Housing Consultation: Remarks Concerning Turnkey Proposals.
Speech delivered 23 September 1971.
---. Letter to the Honorable Leonor K. Sullivan, 25 January 1972.
Darst and Vaughn Mass Housing Projects to Be Dedicated This Afternoon. St. Louis PostDispatch, 28 April 1957.
Evans, E.S. Turnkey Job Plan for Blacks, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 19 April 1970.
Euclid Plaza. St. Louis Housing Authority, 1969.
Goetz, Edward G. New Deal Ruins: Race, Economic Justice & Public Housing Policy. Ithaca,
N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2013.
Gordon, Colin. Mapping Decline: St. Louis and the Fate of the American City. Philadelphia:
University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008.
The James House. St. Louis Housing Authority, 1970.
Jencks, Charles. The Language of Post-Modern Architecture. New York: Rizzoli International
Publications, 1977.
Josse, Lynn. Historical Information on St. Louis Public Housing Developments, 1939-1965. St.
Louis: Landmarks Association of St. Louis, 1999.
Karmin, Monroe W. St. Louis: Can the Decay Be Stopped? Wall Street Journal, 2 March 1972.
Kingsbury Terrace. St. Louis Housing Authority, 1969.
4. Figures
Figure 1: Le Corbusiers model of Plan Voisin (1925). Source: Museum of Modern Art.
Figure 2: Clinton-Peabody Terrace after completion in 1942 Source: Landmarks Association of St. Louis.
Figure 3: Several St. Louis Housing Authority developments and other high-rise residential developments
are included in this 1960 aerial view of the city that appeared in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Blumeyer
Homes (24), Mill Creek Valley (19), the Darst and Webbe projects (17), Pruitt-Igoe (25) and Mansion
House Center (8) appear. Source: Landmarks Association of St. Louis.
Figure 4: Cochran Gardens Apartments upon completion depicted in the Stephen Gorman Bricklaying
Companys 1956 portfolio. Source: St. Louis Building Arts Foundation.
Figure 5: A 1959 United States Geological Survey photograph shows the Pruitt and Igoe projects (left)
and the George L. Vaughn Apartments (right). Source: State Historical Society of Missouri.
Figure 7: One of the towers at the Joseph M. Darst Homes in 1959. Source: St. Louis Housing Authority.
Figure 8: Construction of the Anthony M. Webbe Homes, 1960. Source: St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Figure 9: Site plan for the Arthur Blumeyer Apartments. Source: St. Louis Housing Authority.
Figure 10: One of the towers at the Arthur Blumeyer Apartments. Source: St. Louis Housing Authority.
Figure 11: The Ford Apartments in 2005. Source: Landmarks Association of St. Louis.
Figure 12: Rendering of the Plaza Square Apartments. Source: St. Louis Public Library.
Figure 13: The Heritage House tower in the Mill Creek Valley redevelopment area, 2011. Source:
Preservation Research Office.
Figure 14: The two residential towers at Council Plaza in 2009. Source: Preservation Research Office.
Figure 16: Towne House Apartments in 2009. Source: Preservation Research Office.
Figure 17: The Warwood tower as it appears today. Source: Preservation Research Office.
McCue selected two Peckham, Guyton, Alberts & Viets projects for inclusion in the 1981 edition
of The Building Art in St. Louis: Big Cat Country at the St. Louis Zoo (1976) and the AnheuserBusch Company Office Building (also 1976).90 William Peckham is mentioned in the same
volume for his contribution to the restoration of the Robert Campbell Home (1851) in downtown
St. Louis.
The architectural design of Euclid Plaza recalls the design of the influential Le Corbusier design
of Cit radieuse (1947-1952) in Marseilles, France. There, Corbusier articulated a reinforced
concrete slab housing tower through a pronounced rough concrete exterior grid. The buildings
first floor is recessed behind pilotis that provide structural support. Corrisors run on the building
axis, and some units have balconies. The Marseilles project was Corbusiers first realization of
his program called Unit d'Habitation. The other Units were built in Nantes-Rez called Unit
d'Habitation of Nantes-Rez in 1955, Berlin-Westend in 1957, Briey in 1963, and Firminy in
1965. Euclid Plazas gridded rough concrete wall and general elongated form follow the
Corbusier designs, while some elements, like the dark brick, are more closely related to local
building customs.
Figure 18: Euclid Plaza, view looking southwest toward rear elevation. June 2013.
90
Figure 19: Euclid Plaza, view looking northeast toward primary elevation. June 2013.
Figure 21: Site plan for Euclid Plaza showing the original townhouse development to the south. Source:
St. Louis Housing Authority.
Although programmatically utilitarian, James House has the most locally significant architectural
firm of any building included in this study. Schwarz & Van Hoefen designed the James House
during a prolific period of urban renewal design projects bearing the firms name. Founded in
1899 as Mauran, Russell & Garden, the firms name had many iterations until finally dissolving
as the Kuhlmann Design Group in 1996. As the partnership of Arthur Schwarz & Hari Van
Hoefen, the firm produced many major works for urban renewal projects in St. Louis: the master
plan for Mill Creek Valley (1959-1965); National Register-listed Council Plaza (1967-69),
developed under the Department and Housing Urban Developments Section 202 program; and
Mansion House Center (1967). The firm produced much of the work used by the City Plan
Commissions A Plan for Downtown St. Louis (1960). Schwarz & Van Hoefens urban renewal
designs have been included in the recent St. Louis Modern study of non-residential modernist
architecture in the city, and were published locally and nationally in their era.
While an architectural survey completed in 2010 showed few resources in the core of The Ville
built after 1950, it did identify several resources built in the 1960s by Africa-American institutions
or developers attempting to renew the housing stock in the neighborhood and retain dwindling
population. These resources are among the few resources associated with African-American
settlement actually developed by African-Americans and their institutions. James House is the
most significant of these developments.
Figure 22: View of James House, looking southwest from the intersection of Pendleton and St. Ferdinand
avenues. June 2013.
Figure 23: View of James House, looking northeast from the alley behind the building. June 2013.
Figure 24: Rendering of James House, 1969. Source: St. Louis Housing Authority.
Figure 25: James House site plan. Source: St. Louis Housing Authority.
Figure 26: The Kingsbury Terrace Apartments viewed northeast from Kingsbury Avenue. June 2013.
Figure 27: The Kingsbury Terrace Apartments viewed southeast from the parking lot at rear. June 2013.
Figure 28: Kingsbury Terrace Apartments rendering, 1969. Source: St. Louis Housing Authority.
Figure 29: Typical floor plan, Kingsbury Terrace Apartments. Source: St. Louis Housing Authority.
Figure 30: Site plan for Kingsbury Terrace Apartments. Source: St. Louis Housing Authority.
Figure 31: The Parkview Apartments viewed toward the northeast from Forest Park Avenue. June 2013.
Figure 32: The Parkview Apartments entrance bay, viewed toward the northwest. June 2013.
Figure 33: The rear of the Parkview Apartments, showing the structured parking decks, viewed toward the
southwest from the alley. June 2013.
Figure 34: Rendering of the Parkview Apartments, 1971. Source: St. Louis Housing Authority.
Figure 35: The Parkview Apartments site plan. Source: St. Louis Housing Authority.
Figure 36: The West Pine Apartments viewed southeast from the intersection of West Pine and Taylor
avenues. June 2013.
Figure 37: The West Pine Apartments viewed northeast from Taylor Avenues. June 2013.
Figure 38: The West Pine Apartments viewed northwest from the alley. June 2013.
Figure 39: Rendering of the West Pine Apartments, 1970. Source: St. Louis Housing Authority.
Figure 40: West Pine Apartments site plan. Source: St. Louis Housing Authority.