Community Corner

Where Do You Live? Life in Greater St. Louis at the Center of Patch Series

Patch Regional Editor Holly Edgell discusses the series, which will unfold from now through the summer. Florissant grew by about 3 percent with shifts in demographics.

As a recent transplant to the area, I can’t help but feel there is a split personality aspect to life in metro St. Louis. On the one hand, many St. Louisans seem to never have considered living anywhere else. They love their Cardinals, rave about Ted Drewes Frozen Custard, flock to the Saint Louis Zoo, and happily brave Highway 40 and other roadways to commute for work, shopping, school, leisure and life in general.

On the other hand, many of  those same St. Louisans--when asked where they are from--will reply sheepishly, almost apologetically, about their hometown.

Another part of the area’s split personality disorder is the city vs. the county, which dates back to the big split of 1876. The city is the hub, featuring major cultural, educational, corporate, medical and recreational institutions, as well as resurgent neighborhoods that attract young professionals. Then you have the more than 90 municipalities that make up St. Louis County, many of which are also home to major organizations, educational entities and businesses of all shapes and sizes. Last fall, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch did an excellent series examining this fractured landscape and how it may be undermining economic progress for the region. There also seems to be more talk about reuniting the city and the county

Find out what's happening in Florissantwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Recently, I was part of a brainstorming session organized by Innovate St. Louis, an organization with the following mission: “to better collaborate and help build the entrepreneurial eco-system necessary to make the greater St. Louis region an international hub of innovation and entrepreneurship.”

The people around the table represented businesses big and small, nonprofits, marketing and public relations, journalism, law, science, culture, education and more. As we talked about ideas and challenges related to making the region more attractive to creativity and entrepreneurship, the latest census data came up a few times.

Find out what's happening in Florissantwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The city itself is shrinking, although many cool neighborhoods there are blossoming (think Soulard, Tower Grove, and Shaw). St. Louis County is shrinking slightly. St. Charles County is growing a lot. (Again, I point to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, which did a great “big picture” look at the numbers and trends after the census numbers for Missouri rolled out in February.)

What do the census numbers say about life in the St. Louis metro area? Here at Patch, we decided to look at the data for many of our communities and ask local leaders and residents what they think, why they live where they live, and what challenges and opportunities arise when people move into town or leave.

, which  between 2000 and 2010. Friday, the focus is on Florissant. The , and saw an . The pool of vacant housing also grew during that period.

Throughout the next six months, Patch associate local editor and roving reporter will be looking at life in Patch communities around Greater St. Louis. Wentzville is next up on April 1. Be sure to follow Joe on Twitter (@STLPatch) to find out where our series will go next.

If you want  to a town-by-town look at Missouri population numbers, check out the U.S. Census Bureau's American FactFinder. Simply select your community, and the program does the rest.


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