NGA

Redrawing North St. Louis: The high-stakes land push around NGA

As the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) opens its $1.7 billion western headquarters in north St. Louis, the city has entered a new and contentious phase of redevelopment: the use of eminent domain to reshape the long-struggling neighborhoods surrounding the campus.

City officials are moving to acquire nearly 90 vacant and blighted parcels near the NGA site, arguing that fragmented ownership and years of stalled redevelopment have left the area unable to attract meaningful private investment. Most of the targeted properties are tied to NorthSide Regeneration, the development entity that once promised sweeping revitalization but delivered little visible progress over more than a decade.

Supporters of the eminent domain push say the timing is critical. The NGA campus, one of the largest federal investments in St. Louis' history, is expected to bring thousands of daily workers to the area. Without coordinated land assembly and infrastructure upgrades, officials fear the surrounding neighborhoods could miss a once-in-a-generation opportunity to benefit from the federal presence.

The plan, approved by the St. Louis Board of Aldermen in 2024, limits eminent domain to vacant, unoccupied, or nuisance properties, explicitly excluding occupied homes and active businesses. City leaders have emphasized that the intent is not displacement, but momentum — clearing legal and physical barriers that have prevented redevelopment from taking hold.

Still, the move has reignited long-standing debates about trust, equity, and the role of government in redevelopment. Critics argue that eminent domain, even when narrowly applied, risks repeating past mistakes that hollowed out north St. Louis under the banner of progress. Others question whether the city can deliver on its promise of inclusive growth after decades of unrealized plans.

Legal challenges from property owners are expected, which could delay redevelopment efforts and complicate the city’s timeline. Yet proponents maintain that decisive action is necessary to avoid stagnation around one of the region’s most significant economic engines.

Beyond the legal arguments, the moment represents a crossroads for St. Louis. The NGA headquarters offers a rare chance to reconnect north St. Louis to the city’s economic future. Whether eminent domain becomes a catalyst for long-awaited revitalization — or another chapter in a complicated redevelopment history — will depend on how transparently and responsibly the next steps unfold.


Header image: The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency opened its new campus in St. Louis September 26, 2025 Image | NGA

Draft plans outline a long-term vision to revitalize North St. Louis around the NGA campus

Draft plans for a broad revitalization of six North City neighborhoods surrounding the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency’s (NGA) new campus were released to the public this week, laying out a multi-phased effort that city leaders say will tie large federal investment to long-sought local renewal.

The Project Connect drafts, produced by the St. Louis Development Corporation with input from community stakeholders, cover Carr Square, Columbus Square, Hyde Park, Jeff-Vander-Lou, Old North St. Louis, and St. Louis Place. The hundreds of pages outline priorities including housing reuse, infrastructure upgrades, transportation improvements, workforce development, and cultural amenities. The documents are intended to coordinate private development proposals with public investments tied to the NGA campus.

Officials emphasized that the plans are drafts and are subject to refinement following public comment. An open house and review materials were made available so residents can weigh in on specifics such as converting vacant St. Louis Public Schools buildings into housing, a proposed museum honoring the Negro Leagues in Jeff-Vander-Lou, and targeted streetscape work intended to improve sidewalks, crossings, and stormwater systems.

Construction and engineering work tied to the Next NGA West campus has already been a major presence in North City; the agency opened its new St. Louis facility in late September after a multiyear, roughly $1.7 billion build. The federal project was executed under U.S. Army Corps of Engineers oversight and built by a McCarthy-HITT joint venture, and city planners say that experience and contracting base will help accelerate neighborhood infrastructure contracts.

Design and planning partners on Project Connect include the city’s SLDC and outside consultants experienced in neighborhood planning; Interboro Partners is listed among firms that worked on the “Our Plan” process, which guided community engagement and mapping of implementation steps. Officials said implementation will roll out in phases tied to funding availability, public-works bidding cycles, and private development timelines — a process that could span several years.

Advocates and skeptics alike voiced cautious optimism at recent forums, with supporters pointing to job creation and improved services and critics warning about displacement and the need for enforceable community benefits. City leaders urged residents to review the drafts online and at upcoming meetings so the next round of revisions will reflect neighborhood priorities as Project Connect moves from planning to action.


Header image: Next NGA West, a mega-project jointly managed by the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and U.S. Air Force, opened its new campus in north St. Louis Sept. 26, 2025. Image | NGA

Downtown St. Louis poised to transform into a software technology innovation hub

Downtown St. Louis poised to transform into a software technology innovation hub

Image credit: downtownstl.org