The old building that contains the City Museum was originally a big shoe factory and warehouse. (St. Louis used to be the national leader in shoe manufacturing before it all went offshore.) The back of the structure is a 10 story open space containing crazy spiral slides that moved product from floor to floor. Now two of them are full length slides for people small and flexible enough. (I wouldn't dare.) This seems like a fitting image for a year going down the chutes.
Sunday, December 31, 2023
THE OLD YEAR SPIRALS DOWN
Saturday, December 30, 2023
TITLE? I ALREADY GOT ONE.
As set out in the header. The name over the City Museum's ticket desk refers to title insurance, something readers outside of the U.S. and Canada may not have heard of. It covers you in the event someone has a claim on real estate you own. (http://tinyurl.com/367d6m6m, if you care). One of the nice things about the City Museum is the wealth of old St. Louis architectural details it preserves.
Friday, December 29, 2023
GHOST OF CHRISTMAS PAST
Does this reflect our local psyche? There is a thing going around this year about what are essentially Halloween decorations with a bit of Christmas trim. I've seen it at several houses. This is a dry terrarium at the City Museum with lizards skittering around but it's still creepy.
Thursday, December 28, 2023
NIGHT IN THE CITY #2
Looking west on Clark Street toward Union Station, with the hockey arena in the shadows on the right. Lots of big trucks because the main post office is in the background.
Wednesday, December 27, 2023
NIGHT IN THE CITY
Downtown St. Louis hasn't been doing well since the pandemic. More vacant storefronts, lower office occupancy. One area that stays afloat is the corporate development known as Ballpark Village, part of which is shown here. The baseball stadium is in the shadows on the right. Part of a two block complex of bars, so-so restaurants, a hotel and a luxury apartment building (can't imaging who wants to live there) are center and left. Not much going on on a holiday weekend.
Tuesday, December 26, 2023
WINTER BAUBLE
It seems like every city of any size has a big Ferris wheel. We have had one at the Union Station complex for a few years. The lighting is all computer-controlled LEDs. It pulses and changes constantly. I think it looks best at night.
Monday, December 25, 2023
MADELEINE MONDAY - A CHILD AT CHRISTMAS
This was taken Friday at the City Museum, which, as I have said, is unique in all the world. They have all sorts of wild lights for the holidays, some of which I'll show later. Ellie's sense of wonder is charming.
Sunday, December 24, 2023
DECK THE HALLS
Lafayette Square is one of the oldest neighborhoods in STL with its original housing stock. Almost all of the 19th Century residences have been lovingly restored. Most of them have beautiful holiday decorations. Note the trees in the center windows of the upper floors. We are invited to a New Year's Eve party at one around the corner and I hope we can make it.
Saturday, December 23, 2023
GOOOOOOL!
CityPark, the new stadium for our soccer/football team. St. Louis City SC. We got an expansion franchise that came in first in its division in the regular season but folded in the playoffs. The team is wildly popular.
Friday, December 22, 2023
ONE SET OF VALUES
I went out cruising for images in the late afternoon, hitting the usual suspects. Saint Louis University, where I got my undergraduate and graduate degrees, is a Catholic, Jesuit institution. Good for me but maybe not for them, my Jesuit high school made an effort to teach critical thinking. I also drove by the resolutely secular Washington University, the more prestigious school across town that my sister attended. Not a hint of holiday decorations (so no pictures).
Thursday, December 21, 2023
SANTA CLAUS IS COMING TO TOWN
Any moment now, right? Seen on a building on Chouteau Avenue in The Grove district. The meaning of the sign isn't clear but I think the acronym in the lower right stands for Association of General Contractors of Missouri. Probably something to do with development in the area.
Wednesday, December 20, 2023
BLUE PERIOD
Blue hour at the Saint Louis Art Museum. We all think it's funny that its acronym and domain name is SLAM.
Tuesday, December 19, 2023
SHUCKERS, BUDS AND BLUES
Broadway Oyster Bar on the south edge of downtown. It's something of an institution, although the nearest source of oysters is a long way away (ain't none in the Mississippi). The beverage of choice, of course, is Budweiser and the music is way too loud for me.
Monday, December 18, 2023
WINTERFEST
This is an event that has been going on in our central downtown plaza for several years. There is a small portable ice rink that has not seemed busy when I've been by this season. In other years there was a big tent with a Christmas market, not present this time around. Note the sign for the Igloo Experience, which I mentioned in a recent post. They are plastic transparent domes with seating for four and a central heater, $200 for 90 minutes. One of six was occupied on my last visit. At least some downtown boosters are trying.
Sunday, December 17, 2023
GOAL POSTS
St. Louis has a long, graffiti-permitted section of the Mississippi River floodwall. There are some industrial facilities behind it. It faces west and can simply glow in the late afternoon of a clear winter day.
Saturday, December 16, 2023
HOME MADE
A sign on an old commercial building, visible from a major highway. The smaller lettering in the middle reads "Start Up - Stand Out - Stay." It's like, hey, be an entrepreneur, do something great, but baby please don't go. I don't think it's motivated anyone.
Friday, December 15, 2023
HANUKKAH
Today is the last day of Hanukkah. For the first time this year, our main downtown square has a large menorah. There has been a Christmas tree, put up by the Salvation Army, in the same area for decades (still there, to the right of the frame). Of course, this is particularly poignant in these times, but the horrors on all sides leave me feeling particularly bleak.
Thursday, December 14, 2023
RETURN OF THE THURSDAY ARCH SERIES
Sure, there was a picture a couple of days ago with the Arch in it, but this one is all about architecture and geometry. The building shows a pediment on the south wing of the Old Courthouse.
Wednesday, December 13, 2023
DOWNTOWN SKYLINE
We don't have very big buildings, unless you count the Arch (630 feet / 192 meters). So what do we have here? A law firm, a bar/restaurant/music club, a hotel, an accounting firm and a poopy baby. Just your standard urban stuff. For locals, the view is looking north from the White Castle parking lot, between Broadway and 4th Street.
Tuesday, December 12, 2023
WHERE?
The intersection of Broadway and Chestnut in downtown St. Louis, looking east toward the Arch. There is a junction of several major highways, leading to several bewildering signposts like the one on the right. Think fast!
The historic building on the center and right is known as the Old Courthouse. It is part of the national park that includes the Arch (it's America's smallest). There is a complete restoration in progress.
Monday, December 11, 2023
CHRISTMAS SPIRIT
Back in The Lou looking for images. A main downtown plaza has a smallish event called Winterfest. There is a temporary ice rink and clear plastic heated igloos for four people that cost $200 for 90 minutes, $35 more if you want S'Mores. This little worn trailer is the bar. The company that runs it is called Pour Decisions.
Sunday, December 10, 2023
STL DPB ON THE ROAD - HOGWARTS ON THE SOUTH SIDE
A dining area called the Reynolds Club at the University of Chicago, uncrowded on a Saturday afternoon. There is a large, upscale food court off to the right, serving bright, overachieving kids the nutrition they demand. They all agree it looks a bit like the dining hall at Hogwarts, if somewhat less dank. When I caught some of these portraits of old deans and profs out of the corner of my eye, I could swear some nodded and winked at me.
Saturday, December 9, 2023
STL DPB ON THE ROAD - MONEY TALKS
Food vendor at the Christmas market in the Chicago Loop. Hungry as you may be, your plastic will get you nothing.
Friday, December 8, 2023
STL DPB UNDERGROUND - CTA
Thursday, December 7, 2023
STL DPB ON THE ROAD - GOING DUTCH
The theater district of the Chicago Loop on a chilly, late autumn evening. Friends, this ain't New York but it's sure not St. Louis.
Unseasonably warm and sunny day today. Maybe I can get back out on the local streets.
Wednesday, December 6, 2023
KOAN
Still in Chicago until I can gather some new local material. This was taped without explanation over a stairway in the computer sciences building at the University of Chicago. The small print at the lower right of the sheet says "UChicago Renzai Zen, Bond Chapel." Don't read too much into this.
Tuesday, December 5, 2023
SIX THOUSAND POSTS
The Blogger page where you can review your existing posts and start a new one keeps a running count of how many you have. I noticed last week that the number was passing 5,990. I couldn't believe it at first but this project began in March 2007 and I've published something almost every day I've had Internet access. So, incredibly, this is the six thousandth post of this endeavor. Hooda thunk? I suppose it's kept me on the streets and mostly out of trouble.
Monday, December 4, 2023
STL DPB ON THE ROAD - HOLIDAY CHEER
Sunday, December 3, 2023
STL DPB ON THE ROAD - CHICAGO JAZZ
Since my son lived in Chicago for so many years, I let him set the itinerary for our weekend. For last night's dinner and entertainment, he picked Andy's Jazz Club in the busy River North area. I've never had a good understanding of jazz but it was thrilling to sit at a front row table and be overwhelmed by the sound.
Saturday, December 2, 2023
STL DPB ON THE ROAD - CHICAGO VICE
Brief weekend trip to Chicago to spend some time with my son. He went to college here and stayed for a total of twenty years. He and his family eventually moved to east-central Michigan, near where his wife grew up. We don't see each other enough.
This shop is across the street from the restaurant we went to last night. Name your poison.
Friday, December 1, 2023
CITY DAILY PHOTO DECEMBER THEME - LOCAL HISTORY
A statue of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark (and a goofy looking dog) in a small boat at the Mississippi River. Lewis and Clark, with their band known as the Corps of Discovery, set out in 1806 at the behest of President Thomas Jefferson to explore the vast lands recently acquired from France in what was called the Louisiana Purchase. (It helped finance the Napoleonic Wars.) They eventually reached what is now Oregon and the Pacific Ocean at the mouth of the Columbia River. And it all started here.