Charlotte Berres took advantage of a sunny day last week to step out of her 1886 home and stroll through the history — and memories — of her St. Paul neighborhood.
There, on her block and an adjacent block on Iglehart Avenue in Merriam Park, are 10 homes, places she remembered from childhood in the 1950s, homes filled with Tierneys and Torkelsons, Ryans and Brennans. She pointed out places built in the 1880s, 1890s and early 1900s, and while some have fallen into disrepair, Berres is most concerned about developers intent on knocking them down to make room for multiplexes.
"I think these properties need to be protected," she said. "For me, it's more important to save the character of a city than to have another 10,000 people live here."
The concerns of Berres and others are resonating at City Hall. On Wednesday evening, the St. Paul City Council will hold a public hearing on a proposed moratorium to prevent demolitions or lot splitting in an area soon to be studied as a possible historic preservation district. If approved by the City Council, the moratorium would last nine months.
While preservationists praise the idea as a way to buy time against tear downs and save historic homes, some area property owners and developers worry that such restrictions will put a popular neighborhood out of reach for growing numbers of people who want to live there. Not every old house is historic, they argue.
Developer Jon Schwartzman wants to replace two houses on Marshall Avenue with a five-story apartment building, but he's being challenged by neighbors in court.
"There is a housing crisis in St. Paul," Schwartzman said. "A lot of people don't want to see old houses get torn down. I get it — if they had been kept up. But old doesn't necessarily mean good."
People want to rent in an area near four colleges and close to Interstate 94, the Green Line light rail and the A Line bus rapid transit. But the pickings are slim, Schwartzman said. Citywide, the rental vacancy rate is about 2 percent, while "70 percent of the apartment buildings in St. Paul are 50 years old or older and a lot are more than 80 years old," he said.