Forest Park Parkway is a parkway in Clayton, Missouri and St. Louis that runs from Interstate 170, becomes Forest Park Avenue at Kingshighway Boulevard, and ends at Market Street and Interstate 64. It is considered an arterial snow route.[2][3] Its right-of-way has carried various railroad lines throughout much of its history.
History
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A #14 University-Clayton streetcar along Millbrook in the 1960sThe corridor began life in the 19th century as a heavy rail line used by the Rock Island and Wabash railroads along with local streetcars.[4] The segment between the Terminal Railroad's Central Belt Subdivision (near present day Interstate 170) and Forsyth Junction (now the junction of MetroLink's Red and Blue lines) was abandoned by the Rock Island in 1931. Prior to its abandonment, the railroad operated a passenger depot at Clayton, near the spot of today's MetroLink station. In the 1940s, before the suspension of streetcar service in the St. Louis area, the portion of this corridor between Pershing and DeBaliviere avenues carried the #1 Kirkwood and the #14 University-Clayton streetcar lines. Service on the Kirkwood line ended in 1950 with service on the University-Clayton line ending in 1963.[5][6] The Wabash Railroad continued to operate freight service east and north of Forsyth Junction until 1988.
Millbrook Boulevard was built in a portion of the abandoned Rock Island right-of-way and in 1959, construction began on Forest Park Parkway, an urban renewal project which saw Millbrook renamed and extended from Skinker Boulevard to Kingshighway.[7][4] Here, the Parkway meets Forest Park Avenue which runs east to its present terminus at Market Street and Compton Avenue at Interstate 64 in Midtown St. Louis.
In 2017, the city of St. Louis and BJC Healthcare opened a reconstructed at-grade interchange between Forest Park Avenue and Kingshighway Boulevard. Previously, Forest Park Avenue dipped below-grade and passed beneath Kingshighway as it became Forest Park Parkway.[8] Currently, the intersection with Grand Boulevard still has this underpass feature as motorists enter and exit I-64.
MetroLink
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Airport/Central Corridor
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A MetroLink train passes next to Forest Park Parkway within Forest ParkIn 1993, MetroLink's initial route opened between St. Louis Lambert International Airport and East St. Louis, Illinois. Roughly 7.8 miles (12.6 km) of the abandoned Wabash right-of-way between Normandy in North St. Louis County and Grand Boulevard in St. Louis were reused. The Forest Park-DeBaliviere station was built at the former Forsyth Junction, where the Rock Island and Wabash railroads once met.
Cross County Extension
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MetroLink's Blue Line running in the median of Forest Park Parkway in downtown ClaytonIn June 1999, the East-West Gateway Council of Governments released conceptual designs for the Cross County MetroLink extension including at-grade, below-grade and elevated portions.[9] Initially, trains were to run at-grade in the median of Forest Park Parkway with stations between Forest Park and Clayton. After considering feedback from local residents, Metro opted to move this segment into cuts and subway tunnels along the former streetcar right-of-way and place the Skinker and University City-Big Bend stations underground.[10] These changes were finalized in 2002 but led to delays and cost overruns on the extension. However, construction began in 2003 and the extension opened on August 26, 2006.[10][11]
Major intersections and stations
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References
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Forest Park was dedicated on June 24, 1876, coinciding with the centenary of the United States Declaration of Independence.
In their remarks, the Park's founders highlighted the vision that St. Louisans wanted a park that "the rich and poor, the merchant and mechanic, the professional man and the day laborer, each with his family and lunch basket, can come and enjoy his own ... all without stint or hindrance ... and there will be no notice put up to 'Keep off the grass.'"
Today that vision is still upheld, with the 1,300-acre park offering something for everyone — amazing destinations and institutions that challenge the mind, a Dual Path system that invites both leisurely walks and intense workouts, quiet places to picnic and read, and a variety of popular festivals and events — all set in the background of a city oasis, a place to escape it all.