County of building: Independent City of St. Louis
Location of building: 3024-26 S. Jefferson Ave., Benton Park Neighborhood, St. Louis
Built: 1895
Ownership at time of nomination:
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3026-24 S. Jefferson
Blue Haven Investment Corp. P.
2119 Arsenal
St. Louis, MO 63118" ~ NRHP Nomination Form
Last business in 3026 address was Vapor Lounge and I am told this is also closed.
At the time of my visit the empty Off-Arsenal Gallery still showed it signage, but was a closed business. The gallery used both 3024 and 3026 address side of the building.
"Late Nineteenth Century Revival, circa 1885 - 1910. Coded D
"Toward the end of the nineteenth century, many District builders began to include a wider variety of elements in their designs based on new revival styles popular at the time such as the Queen Anne, Romanesque and Classical. With some exceptions, the styles are expressed principally in detailing such as window and dormer treatment, roof forms, and ornament; often different stylistic motifs are combined on the same building. Typical new features include broad-arched openings; small towers or turrets with conical or pyramidal roofs; large, gabled dormers; terra cotta panels and Friezes; decorative ironwork; elaborated brickwork on cornices, windows panel doors; and a few projecting front porches. Early evidence of the new fashions can be found in Mansard Style buildings which attempt picturesque effects through enriched dormer designs and/or slightly projecting bays that break the planar facades (Photos #55, 56). More fully developed expressions of the Queen Anne and Romanesque modes are illustrated in large houses of the period which display irregular massing and complex roof forms in addition to new detailing (Photos #57, 58, 60). The majority of buildings, however, maintain the basic rectangular shape of earlier structures, and employ either flat roofs (sometimes masked with prominent facade gables, parapets and small pseudo-roof forms, Photo #69; 70, right; 71) or mansards." ~ NRHP Nomination Form
Map - Northern Half Map - Southern Half
"Located on St. Louis' south side, the Benton Park District is a 19th and early 20th century immigrant neighborhood comprising approximately 1668 contributing buildings and 186 non-contributing ones. The majority of structures are residential; in addition,
there are three public schools, four churches and two parochial schools, two brewery complexes and three smaller industrial buildings. The contributing buildings were constructed
between circa 1848 and 1935; except for a small number of early frame one story houses, the buildings are brick, the traditional St. Louis building material. Residential examples predominately are multi-family, constructed as two- to six-bay, one and two
story detached houses and as two- and three-bay, two story attached rows. Two primary commercial strips on Cherokee Street and Jefferson Avenue have concentrations of buildings combining first story storefronts and second story flats; numerous other mixed-use buildings appear on corners throughout the District. While ornamental detailing and roof forms provide stylistic variations, District buildings are unified by their overall planar
facades, similar cornice lines, materials, color and scale. The District's street plan follows grids laid out at the time the subdivisions were originally platted. Three public parks, Cherokee Park, Carnegie Place and Benton Park (Photo #1) were set aside as open spaces in the 19th century.
"Compared with similar inner city neighborhoods, the Benton Park District has survived with unusually high structural density and little loss of integrity. The vast majority of streetscapes are intact with little demolition, few intrusions and minor alterations to buildings. Where alterations have occurred, they most frequently are replacements to deteriorated elements on rear elevations (Photo #31), cornices (Photos #54, 59, 83), porch
supports (Photos #17, 21), and mansard roofs (Photos ,142, 43). Some storefronts are boarded but the cast iron framing is undisturbed (Photos #63, 54, 88). The houses have been well-maintained and have a high rate of owner-occupancy.
"All non-contributing buildings are designated with an asterisk on the Architectural Survey Map; they include buildings which are less than fifty years old such as numerous one story brick in-fill houses (Photo #2) as well as various other commercial and industrial buildings (Photos #80, right; 103, right. Examples of non-contributing historic buildings which have lost integrity through radical facade alteration are illustrated in Photos ,13, 4, 5.