This week marks the 50th anniversary of the dedication of the St. Louis Gateway Arch, the architectural masterpiece by Eero Saarinen. Though most St. Louis residents have grown comfortable with this impressive monument as part of our everyday experience, I think I can safely say we do not take it for granted. The 630-foot inverted catenary structure is uniquely St. Louis: it defines us, inspires us, and is the main attraction when sightseeing with visitors.
To stand near it or beneath it is a breathtaking experience. Views of it abound in the city, from all directions, in all weather and light. It never ceases to change, to peek at you from vistas far away, to remind you of something remarkable. The Arch is a testament to man’s ability to dream big. It is a testament to excellence in architectural design, engineering prowess, and hard work by steelworkers who would not take “no” for an answer. Early estimates were that over a dozen workers would be killed in the multi-year construction process. Not one answered that prediction.
I have often wondered just where the city of St. Louis might be without this stainless steel superstructure. Not only does it define our city, it is one of the modern marvels of architecture anywhere in the world. It’s journey began with the seed of an idea from one man, Luther Ely Smith, who suggested to then mayor Bernard Dickman that the city needed some type of memorial to “revive the riverfront and stimulate the economy.” I am sure they had no idea what they were getting themselves into. Over the years the idea was nurtured through endless committees and juries, years of planning, and three decades later was dedicated as complete.
The fact that this design was selected from so many other entrants in the 1945–48 Design Competition gives one hope that “committees” do occasionally get it right. Some of the designs that were not selected included giant statues of Thomas Jefferson, westward-bound pioneers, and buffalo. One dubious design included “a restaurant with space for dancing” in a structure extending over the river. Then Washington University architecture professor Paul Valenti suggested and drew plans for a massive bridge over the Mississippi with a subway underneath it. Impressive idea, but not selected.
The competition jury were all established architects: Charles Nagel, director of the Brooklyn Museum who later headed the St. Louis Art Museum; Fiske Kimball, director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art; S. Herbert Hare, a Kansas City landscape architect; William Wurster, dean of architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Richard Neutra, who was known for his modernist work in Southern California; Roland Wank, chief architect of the Tennessee Valley Authority; Louis LaBeaume, a St. Louis architect who drafted the competition rules. Howe, the competition adviser, was a prominent Philadelphia architect.
The competition drew 172 entries, including Charles and Ray Eames, Walter Gropius, and even Eero Saarinen’s father Eliel, who was with Cranbrook Institute of Architecture and Design at the time.
Charles Eames, Ray Eames, and John Entenza submitted this entry but it was eliminated in Round 1; National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
The final section was placed at the top and the Arch was completed on October 28, 1965. Join me in celebrating the 50th anniversary of this great American achievement.
Today the Arch grounds is being improved with a new, dramatic “Park Over the Highway” that will, for the first time, allow visitors to walk from the Old Courthouse to the Arch grounds to the riverfront on one continuous greenway, without a curb or stair step in their way.
Read more about this exciting new development at CityArchRiver.
+++
National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
Yale University Archives
National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
National Park Service / Jefferson National Expansion Memorial
© John Foster