© 2024 St. Louis Public Radio
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

North St. Louis building where Ike and Tina Turner performed won’t be demolished, for now

This is a recent photo of the building that once housed Club Imperial.
Robert Vroman

Updated Jan. 23 — A building that was the site of an historic St. Louis music venue will remain standing, at least for the time being.

The St. Louis Preservation Board Monday night unanimously backed a decision to deny a demolition permit for the former Club Imperial.

Building owner Robert Vroman, who bought the building last August in an auction, said he hopes public attention will entice a new buyer with plans to restore the space. The deadline for paying additional taxes is summer 2019, Vroman said. He said that if no one steps forward with a renovation offer by then, he’ll let the property return to the city for another tax auction.

Original story:

A building that once housed the historic Club Imperialcould soon demolished.

But preservationists are fighting to save the north St. Louis structure at 6306-28 West Florissant Ave., where big names like Ike and Tina Turner once performed. Bob Kuban and the In-Men and the bands of KXOK's Johnny Rabbitt also performed there during the club's heyday in the 1950s through the 1970s.

Members of the city’s Preservation Board are discussing whether to allow demolition during a meeting this afternoon.

Robert Vroman bought the West Florissant Avenue building last August in an auction. No one has offered to buy it for renovation and that it’s too dilapidated to save, he said.

“I think the market has pretty much spoken, the city has spoken; it’s gone through tax auction twice,” Vroman said. “The building is, just, it is dead. It has died and now it’s time to do something new.”

But areas of decline often come back, in time, according to Andrew Weil, executive director of Landmarks Association of St. Louis. He cited the Central West End, Lafayette Square and Soulard neighborhoods as examples.

“If every time someone just pronounced a building ‘dead,’ and we allowed it to disappear we really wouldn’t have a lot to be working with today,” Weil said.

Vroman bought the building for $73,000, knowing he’d also have to pay $20,000 in back taxes.

A beauty products company wants to buy the building, demolish it and build a new structure, Vroman said. The company is offering $135,000.

Vroman said he supports the area in and around the Walnut Park Easst neighborhood, and owns 37 properties there. But he said he doesn't have time to wait for the area to improve. His business plan is to buy up properties and turn them quickly.

“I have basically a year to get rid of them before the next round of auctions comes around,” he said.

Dan Krasnoff, director of St. Louis’ cultural resources office, has denied a permit for demolition. This afternoon, the Preseveration Board is considering that recommendation, and hearing from Vroman and anyone from the public who wants to have a say. Krasnoff said a decision is expected today.

Follow Nancy on Twitter:  @NancyFowlerSTL

Nancy is a veteran journalist whose career spans television, radio, print and online media. Her passions include the arts and social justice, and she particularly delights in the stories of people living and working in that intersection.