Ness Sandoval
@ybytata.bsky.social
260 followers 120 following 140 posts
Demography and Urban Studies, All Things Geo-spatial and Public Policy
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I understand this is not proposal for the city, but eventually these will get big.
I am not sure these types of center belong in any city. Maybe they belong in a place like Earth City or somewhere in Jefferson county.
That should will play a major role.
The data center at the Armory is politically dead. Any elected official who supports it is likely to face a serious challenge in the next election. My sense is that the “yes” vote on the Armory data center played a major role in the alderperson’s defeat.
www.kbtx.com/2025/09/12/c...
College Station City Council unanimously rejects land sale for AI data center
Many raised concerns about noise, infrastructure demands, and long-term health impacts.
www.kbtx.com
A generation of babies born in the Saint Louis metro is missing from the demographic records. The region is missing about 220K to 300K residents based on the number births over deaths. Natural population increase has ended. Saint Louis will have a record number of deaths and not enough births.
Last year, there were approximately 40,990 high school graduates in the 15-county Saint Louis MSA. 29,571 first graders are enrolled. By 2035 we may see around 27,000 graduates, a decline that signals a smaller future workforce and fewer young families entering adulthood in the region.
A sneak peak at my talk tonight at the Missouri History Museum.
Even if you did not make the correct. #1 and #2 are statistically the same score.
If those scores are correct and you correct for variation whic is a standard statistical practice. H3 gets the higher score.
Friends,

I will present new research on what could happen to the Saint Louis MSA. After 50 years of population growth, that era is coming to an end. STL will need an influx of new and younger residents who can build businesses, start families, and drive the next generation of growth.
Reposted by Ness Sandoval
Reposted by Ness Sandoval
St. Louis is at a demographic crossroads: new 2024 Census data show both warning signs and opportunities.

Saint Louis University professor Ness Sándoval joined @stlonair.bsky.social to talk about how building more single‑family homes may be key to sustaining growth.
The St. Louis region stands at a demographic crossroads, SLU professor says
Preliminary results from the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2024 American Community Survey offer both encouragement and caution for the region’s future.
www.stlpr.org
Friends,

Join me today at noon on St. Louis on the Air as we consider the newest census release. It is a mixed story for our region, filled with both challenge and promise.

Here is some national data

Join us we talk how these trends look locally.

www.datawrapper.de/_/StTrO/
National Trends for Hispanic Or Latino Origin By Race | Created with Datawrapper
Create interactive, responsive & beautiful charts — no code required.
www.datawrapper.de
There simply are not enough of projected births to offset the deaths of Baby Boomers, let alone GenX deaths. The region will shrink with migration.
If we work collaboratively to build housing and attract migration from other states and counties, we could see around 450,000 births during the period when Baby Boomers are passing away. This assumes no significant decline in fertility over the next two decades.
In the 15-county Saint Louis MSA, an estimated 625,000 Baby Boomers will die over the next two decades. The region will face a profound demographic test. If we are fortunate, we may welcome around 520,000 births during that same period. A more realistic estimate is closer to 450,000 we work today.
This is the path to growth when deaths outnumber births. The state added 101 residents from migration and 59,819 international migrants from 2020 to 2024. The city and county have to do a better job of welcoming new residents and investing in the current residents.
But there people like me that publicized the facts that let the public judge for themselves the demographic health of the state.
Missouri is struggling to recover from COVID. The state does not have the demographic resilience to return to a pattern of more births than deaths. Many people are upset that I made this map. Maybe it is a reminder that state never prioritized families with children. You can hide the facts.
Newsflash: families and children won’t wait 5–7 years for North Saint Louis neighborhoods to be rebuilt. The story of population loss is really about the city’s failure to see that the candle of hope is slowly burning out.
Reposted by Ness Sandoval
1-4 pm September 14th Oratorio STL Workshop at St. Francis de Sales Oratory

Courtyard Urbanism: Building Cities for Families

Register www.eventbrite.com/e/courtyard-...

Also see @ybytata.bsky.social posts
SLU Professor @ybytata.bsky.social says Detroit has been able to stem the tide of population loss by prioritizing families with kids — and that St. Louis would do well to follow its lead. #STL #population #birthrate #immigration #census

Read/listen 🔊:
Demographer warns St. Louis could face early consequences of America’s falling birth rate
SLU professor Ness Sándoval says that Detroit has been able to stem the tide of population loss by prioritizing families with kids — and that St. Louis would do well to follow its lead.
www.stlpr.org