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The Shortcut Walking Paths of St. Louis

The Shortcut Walking Paths of St. Louis

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PostFeb 23, 2013#1

With no fanfare St. Louis is losing one of its most well worn shortcut walking paths. Fortunately, the new Gotham development is replacing it:


These paths can be found all over the city, especially on the near Northside. They require two important factors: 1.) people and 2.) places to go. They thrive in areas that have residents, vacant lots (particularly vacant corner lots), small businesses and bus stops. Some examples:


If you look closely at this example, you can see that Google Maps has actually highlighted the walking path, as if it is a recommended route for pedestrians:


These "bum paths" or "bum highways" (as a friend of mine eloquently calls them), are not just a Northside phenomenon:

Heading north from the Soulard Market overpass:


Perhaps the best of them all, heading to The Ritz-Carlton from the Forsyth Metrolink Station:

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PostFeb 23, 2013#2

Impressive. But everybody knows that nobody walks in Saint Louis, so obviously this is photoshopped!

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PostFeb 25, 2013#3

While attending college in Ohio, a professor of mine brought up how there is a wonderful walking path in U City. The prof knew of it from time spent at Wash U (can't remember if former prof there or from visiting friends in STL), stretching from near the campus north through all the "university" streets and beyond. The comment stuck on my prof's opinion of how nice it was to have a dense residential area with such a pathway available.

Add-in the other walking path connecting Wash U with the Loop, that one path with the bridge over Forest Park Parkway.

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PostFeb 25, 2013#4

^ the one labeled "ackert walkway ave" on the Google???

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PostFeb 25, 2013#5

^Yeah, just did a search, and that's what it's named. The second one I listed, actually; the one brought to my attention while in Ohio is Varsity Walk, which I guess (after looking over the Google Maps page for U City) has shrunk or become a little more "unofficial" in recent years. I remember this walk used to extend under Forest Park Parkway but was shut down when Metrolink came in.

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PostFeb 25, 2013#6

Richmond Heights also has a couple of them in the Moorlands neighborhood. When I lived on Claytonia I remember one was right down the street "Ethel Walk"-it picked up where Ethel Avenue ended. There was another in the area too I just can't remeber.

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PostMar 04, 2013#7

The best paths cut through the Parkview neighborhood from wash u to the loop.

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PostMar 04, 2013#8

The Parkview paths are definitely the Cadillacs of St. Louis walking paths. There's also the lesser known Waterman Way path, which used to cut from the alley next to Forest Park Parkway across Pershing up to Waterman. Unfortunately at some point it got Schoemehl-potted. Hopefully some day Skink-D residents will open it back up:


PostMar 04, 2013#9

Although, that doesn't come close to the Schoemehl-potastic work that has occured in creating the Ruth Porter Mall walking path:
@ Cates Ave.

@Cabanne Ave.

The path's intersection @ Maple Ave. is rather tasteful - just two cobblestone rumble strips. I have to wonder how often that Stop sign is heeded.

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PostMar 04, 2013#10

^ I believe all, or at least more of these streets now dead-end with the renovations to the Porter Mall.

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PostMar 04, 2013#11

I walked down the Ruth Porter Mall about a month ago. There is at least one street that is still open (Maple) as well as the Hodiamont ROW. This park is pretty nice in my opinion. The West End has been full of dead ends. At least these closed streets aren't restricting pedestrians.

Here are some photos I took of the park:http://www.flickr.com/photos/pasa/sets/ ... 466060739/

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PostMar 04, 2013#12

There's also a path in North Hampton, running from Pernod to Chippewa, between Macklind and Brannon.

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PostMar 04, 2013#13

Alex Ihnen wrote:^ I believe all, or at least more of these streets now dead-end with the renovations to the Porter Mall.
GRG didn't change any of the open or closed streets. They are as they were. Too many closed IMO.

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PostMar 04, 2013#14

debaliviere wrote:There's also a path in North Hampton, running from Pernod to Chippewa, between Macklind and Brannon.
It also went a block south of Chippewa before it was sold to the adjacent property owners in the early 2000's. I used those crosswalks a lot in my youth. My friends and I would ride our bikes around and try to ditch a pre-selected person out of the group. The crosswalks were great for making an unexpected turn out of the alley.

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PostMar 04, 2013#15

Do "illegal" paths count? The one that spurred me to start my blog: the shortcut through the fence to the Forest Park MetroLink station at 57xx Pershing.

http://www.gatewaystreets.org/2009/dang ... rest-park/