St. Louis Century Building

St. Louis Century Building

Infobox_nrhp | name =Century Building and Syndicate Trust Building
nrhp_type =


caption =Century Building, 1897
location= St. Louis, Missouri
area =
architect=
architecture=
added = October 16, 2002
governing_body =
refnum=02001054 cite web|url=http://www.nr.nps.gov/|title=National Register Information System|date=2007-01-23|work=National Register of Historic Places|publisher=National Park Service]
The Century Building, built in 1896, was a 10-story Classical Revival historic building in downtown St. Louis, Missouri that was used for offices, retail, and a 1600-seat theatre. [http://www.builtstlouis.net/century00a.html) Built St. Louis] ] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 16, 2002.

In 1999, St. Louis planners and historic preservationists working as an advisory committee released their Downtown Plan calling for the preservation and adaptive reuse of the Century Building. [http://www.americancity.org/article.php?id_article=199 The Next American City] ] The Slay administration rejected the recommendations of the committee, and announced that a development team had been chosen (DESCO and DFC, Inc) in order to renovate the nearby historic Old Post Office (OPO) and to demolish the Century Building in order to build a parking deck to service the OPO. City officials made the argument that tenants for the renovated OPO building demanded parking within view of their new offices.

St. Louis' preservationists next line of defense was the National Trust for Historic Preservation (NTHP). Contacted in 2001, NTHP was initially supportive of preservation efforts for the building. Staff recommended that an alternative site be chosen for the proposed parking deck, noting that there were "10 underused parking facilities in the 10 blocks surrounding the OPO".

In 2004, the NTHP changed their stance concerning the project. The NTHP would now provide $6.9 million gap financing for the OPO renovations and parking deck in tax credits. NTHP refused to stop the demolition of the Century Building, and was now supporting the very project that preservationists were desperately trying to stop.

Preservationists around the country signed an on-line petition in a concerted effort to save the Century Building. Richard Moe, president of the NTHP, defended his organization's actions by stating that the demolition of the Century Building was key to revitalizing the area around the OPO. [http://travel.nytimes.com/2005/03/31/garden/31pres.html?ex=1182571200&en=e15aa2dd88b4e3de&ei=5070 New York Times article - March 31, 2005] ]

The Landmarks Association filed a final lawsuit on October 19th, 2004 requesting a temporary restraining order to halt demolition. [http://stlouis.bizjournals.com/stlouis/stories/2004/10/18/daily65.html St. Louis Business Journal, October 21, 2004] ] Their request was ultimately denied, and demolition of the building commenced shortly thereafter.

Many historic preservationists call the loss of the Century Building a major sacrifice for Downtown St. Louis. Some have also said the NTHP drifted from its primary mission of historic preservation by supporting the developers of the OPO project. Other professionals take the side that certain sacrifices need to be made in order to improve neighborhoods as whole, and the Century Building was one of these sacrifices. It is generally agreed, however, that the Century Building was an important part of St. Louis' architectural history, and could have been transformed into an asset for Downtown St. Louis had the building been saved.

References


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