LaClede Town

Summary

LaClede Town was a mixed-income, federally funded housing project in St. Louis, Missouri. Located near St. Louis University, it opened in 1964. It incorporated a mix of housing types and had spaces dedicated to social interaction and artistic production. It was an intentionally diverse community with respect to residents' income and race/ethnicity. This experimental urban development was "cool, hip, cheap and populated by people committed to making integration work."[1] It became an incubator for new music, dance, poetry and other arts, especially jazz.[2] Loyal former residents began organizing reunions in 1997.[1]

Eventually, LaClede Town became run down, and the complex was demolished in the late 1980s. Some of the Grand Forest Apartments, a part of LaClede town, still exist as student housing for St. Louis University. Berea Presbyterian Church, which was central to the community and predated the LaClede Town development, still stands. However, it has been redesigned for commercial use.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Sweets, Ellen, "Laclede: An Experiment in Ethnic Harmony," The Seattle Times, Nov. 9, 1997.
  2. ^ Looker, Benjamin. "Point from which creation begins": The black Artists' Group of St. Louis. Missouri Historical Society Press, St. Louis, 2004.

Further reading edit

  • LaClede Town Reminiscence[1]
  • "Poets of Action" St. Louis Black Artists Group[2]
  • Ramin Bavar, "LaClede Town: an analysis of design and government policies in a government-sponsored project" (Master of Architecture Thesis, Washington University in St. Louis, 1995).
  • Ellen Perry Berkeley, "LaClede Town: the most vital town in town," Architectural Forum, November 1968.
  • Traveling Back to LaClede Town By Keri O’Brien[3]
  • Former LaClede Town residents Ike Willis and MWA architects[4]


38°38′02″N 90°13′28″W / 38.63389°N 90.22444°W / 38.63389; -90.22444

  1. ^ The Commonspace > Grassroots Civics and Culture in St. Louis, TheCommonSpace.org
  2. ^ Jazz - AllAboutJazz.com Archived 24 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine, AllAboutJazz.com
  3. ^ MHSvoices.org Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine,
  4. ^ MWAarchitects.com