Town and Country Mall

Tally ho! Just when I thought I knew of every defunct and demolished mall in the St. Louis region, life throws a curveball. I just learned about the existence of the Town and Country Mall, at the southeast corner of Woodson Road and Page Boulevard in Overland. Opening in November of 1960, two years before…

Chesterfield Mall, Under Demolition

While demolition officially commenced on October 15, exterior signs of the deconstruction of the almost fifty year old Chesterfield Mall have only just begun to show on the exterior. Completion is set for an ambitious deadline of April of 2025. Much of the material is marked for recycling, including grinding up the concrete, etc. Two…

St. Paul’s Church and Cemetery, Oakville, and Environs

Let’s head south, deep into South St. Louis County and check out some very old historic sites. Our first stop is St. Paul’s United Church of Christ, Oakville, which was probably originally a German Evangelisch church. There are multiple expansions here, including a Modernist sanctuary as well as an English Gothic Revival church building facing…

Grantwood Village

In the late 1920s, the R. Mederacke Realty and Investment Company began the development of what was originally known as Grantwood Terrace, just to the east of Grant’s Farm on Gravois Road. Lots were at least 100 feet wide and ranged from 240 to 350 feet deep. Architectural styles were typical of the time period…

Saint Andrew Presbyterian Church

Sited on a prominent stretch of Loughborough Avenue in St. Louis Hills, St. Andrew Presbyterian Church, designed by famed Modernist architect Harris Armstrong, was completed in 1960. See interior views at Built St. Louis; I agree with Rob’s appraisal that the clerestory was surely not originally painted sky blue, but was probably gray. The church…

St. Mark’s Episcopal Church

Tucked away on a quiet side street in St. Louis Hills, St. Mark’s Episcopal Church might very well be one of the first expressions of Modernist ecclesiastic architecture in St. Louis. The church, constructed in 1939, created quite the stir when it opened, and was featured in a glowing review article in the Globe-Democrat by…

St. Louis Hills, November 2024

I was in St. Louis Hills so I thought I would see if I could find as many Spanish Revival houses as possible. I ran out of ones to find after awhile. The house above was probably not painted white originally. The houses and apartment buildings of St. Louis Hills represent an interesting transition from…

Normandy, Part Two

Crossing over Florissant Road, we are now on Bermuda Drive, which appears on the Normandy Park plat maps. We see the back of the house above which we saw back in May of 2019. Much like along Florissant Road that we saw back in May of 2019, there is a row of Gingerbread houses of…

Cote Brilliante Avenue from Goodfellow Boulevard to Union Boulevard

Continuing through Wells-Goodfellow, we pass by Stowe School, which closed in 2009 and is now for sale for $450,000. Built in 1967, I call this design, which appear throughout the northwest side, the last generation of schools before the dramatic decline in student population in the city. After the schoolyard there is this lone, abandoned…

Dr. Martin Luther King Drive From Union Boulevard to Hodiamont Avenue

We jump to Union Boulevard on Dr. Martin Luther King Drive (Wohl Community Center is one place we went by) and start to see some more interesting buildings along the former Easton Avenue. These one story commercial buildings look largely abandoned. We now arrive in the Wellston Loop, which I have looked at before back…