I've noticed that virtually everyone here has this idea in their head that the one thing downtown needs more than anything else is the Shedd Aquarium. Like this competition around the arch grounds is all about where to put the aquarium and that's the silver bullet that will make us a major international city.
The one thing that upsets me more than anything about St. Louis is the constant duplication of effort. There's a butterfly house at the zoo, and there's a butterfly house in Chesterfield. Whatever for? UMSL could have invested in the Kiel Opera House and decided building their own performing arts center in the airport's flight path was a better investment. SLU's basketball team is too good to share the Kiel Center, they need their own stadium. A casino invests in a shuttle bus instead of Metro's downtown circulator. and so on.
The zoo, with the new Sea Lion Sound, is getting a lot more Sea World like. Note that it is already supported by the city and county. Why not let it gradually become our aquarium? The AZA, the zoo/aquarium certifing organization, is one and the same. Our zoo can be both.
Or alternately, we can recognize that we have a downtown aquarium. It isn't great, but it is in fact a downtown aquarium. Don't invest in a new one. Invest in the one we have. Check out the first floor,
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Do you see sea creatures? I do.
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It isn't a great aquarium. There's very little room or structural support for more water there, but there's no reason to give up either. It's slowly improving. If money is magically found for a real aquarium, then it should be built next to the City Museum in any of the adjacent parking lots. Naturally, tunnels would probably snake between the two. We don't need new institutions when there's so much room for growth in the ones we have.
The one thing that upsets me more than anything about St. Louis is the constant duplication of effort. There's a butterfly house at the zoo, and there's a butterfly house in Chesterfield. Whatever for? UMSL could have invested in the Kiel Opera House and decided building their own performing arts center in the airport's flight path was a better investment. SLU's basketball team is too good to share the Kiel Center, they need their own stadium. A casino invests in a shuttle bus instead of Metro's downtown circulator. and so on.
The zoo, with the new Sea Lion Sound, is getting a lot more Sea World like. Note that it is already supported by the city and county. Why not let it gradually become our aquarium? The AZA, the zoo/aquarium certifing organization, is one and the same. Our zoo can be both.
Or alternately, we can recognize that we have a downtown aquarium. It isn't great, but it is in fact a downtown aquarium. Don't invest in a new one. Invest in the one we have. Check out the first floor,


Do you see sea creatures? I do.

It isn't a great aquarium. There's very little room or structural support for more water there, but there's no reason to give up either. It's slowly improving. If money is magically found for a real aquarium, then it should be built next to the City Museum in any of the adjacent parking lots. Naturally, tunnels would probably snake between the two. We don't need new institutions when there's so much room for growth in the ones we have.













