Flood Buyout Properties on North Main Being Renovated Flood Buyout Properties on North Main Being Renovated
Flood Buyout Properties on North Main Being Renovated

The Ste. Genevieve Herald
Wed., April 14, 2004
By Jean Feld Rissover

Two of the last few properties bought out following major flooding in Ste. Genevieve have been purchased by private individuals and are being renovated.
The properties were among four flood-prone buildings considered to be of historic significance that were purchased by the state in 1995. The state “mothballed” the properties, hoping they would eventually be bought by people who would renovate them.
“We’re glad to see it happen,” said Sandy Koller, the city’s zoning administrator in charge of buyout properties. “It means two houses that have been sitting empty will be occupied soon.”
Both the properties are located on North Main Street. One is a multistory brick, Queen Ann-style house. It was purchased by Steve Streiler. The other is a house at North Main and Ziegler Street. That buyer is Eddie Luttrell.
Both buildings are being renovated.
Koller said the buy-up of the buyouts could mean the city will get about $29,000 from the sale of the homes. The city entered into a contract with the state during the original buyout. The terms of the agreement included a payment to the city if the buildings were re-sold.
“Under the agreement, we’re supposed to get the money back,” Koller said. “But some preliminary discussions with state officials suggest they may not want to pay. They’ve indicated that they are reluctant to do so since they’ve been maintaining the properties for so long a period of time.”
Two more buyout properties are still on the market. One is a small log building on Ziegler, the other a two-story brick at Fourth and LaHaye streets.
“There has been some interest in at least one of those buildings,” Koller said. “But we think the state is waiting to see what the Corps of Engineers has planned for the creek mitigation project before they sell them to anyone.”
Koller said that while the historic buildings being renovated aren’t in the city’s Landmarks District, the renovations are being overseen by the state, which has imposed the U.S. Secretary of the Interior’s guidelines for historic preservation on all historic buyout properties the state holds. The guidelines are paralleled by local guidelines.


Leave a Reply


Before you comment: please feel free to add helpful or interesting information as is relevant to the page you are viewing. You are welcome to submit generic queries that are related to this page, however please note that the webmaster is not currently able to answer every comment/query. Please do not post the same comment more than once or on multiple pages. It is recommended that you subscribe to comments (see below), in this way you will be notified if someone posts some follow up information after you. Otherwise, your only option is to regularly check this page for new responses, the webmaster is not able to personally notify you of replies at this time. Thank you.

Notify me of followup comments via e-mail. You can also subscribe without commenting.