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Glasgow Village, The Past

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St. Louis County Open Government, Aerial View of Glasgow Village, 1955.

I read a recent Post-Dispatch article about the recent travails of the unincorporated North County community of Glasgow Village, and a neighborhood leader who was quoted saying that 600 of the 1700 housing units in the area needed to be demolished, a whopping 35%.

The huge area, just south of I-270 before it crosses the Mississippi River at the Chain of Rocks, was built in the early 1950s, when the eponymous amusement park was still in operation, and the western water intake was still reached via a dyke. I-270 was not even built yet. Lookaway Drive, a street of elegant early Twentieth Century houses, formed the eastern boundary. Honestly, despite the proximity to I-270, I still feel like the area is isolated.

St. Louis Globe-Democrat, May 11, 1952

C.T. Williams was the developer, and the development was built in a series of numbered sections. Houses costs around $11,700 and came with modern amenities such as garbage disposals and dishwashers.

St. Louis Globe-Democrat, September 16, 1952

As can be seen above and below, large swaths of forest were left as common areas, and street names were inspired by Scottish place names.

St. Louis Globe-Democrat, September 16, 1951

The dominant, if perhaps the only, house style, was Cape Cods, much like the nearby Castle Point neighborhood, which I looked at recently.

St. Louis Globe-Democrat, May 11, 1952

I have to admit that the design was very well-thought out, with a compact floor layout that managed to fit three bedrooms, an eat-in kitchen and living room that flowed into a full-sized dining room. While most houses did not include a one car garage, some did across an open-air breezeway. The architects, as can be seen above, were Paul Klingensmith and Associates. Klingensmith was a director of the Missouri State Association of Registered Architects and had offices at 4232 West Pine in St. Louis. He was also active in drawing up plans for the 1940 renovation of the Ulysses S. Grant historic site. He originally worked with Brussel and Viterbs in 1918 before opening his own firm.

St. Louis Globe-Democrat, September 20, 1953

There was also a commercial shopping district in the center of the development, with a core of apartment buildings surrounding it.

St. Louis Globe-Democrat, May 11, 1952

It perhaps looks more cosmopolitan than when I went by before its demolition a few years ago.

St. Louis Globe-Democrat, May 11, 1952

Tomorrow we’ll look at Glasgow Village today.


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