Where Magazine St Louis Oct 2018

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GUIDE TO ST.LOUIS

The Spirits of St. Louis Beer, Wine, Cider and more

EAT

CINDER HOUSE CHANNELS SOUTH AMERICA

SHOP

BOOKS & SOUVENIRS AT MISSOURI HISTORY MUSEUM SHOP

PLAY

ST. LOUIS BLUES NHL SEASON BEGINS

PROMOTION

Sample the Underground Collection of limited-run beers at the Anheuser-Busch Biergarten

OCTOBER 2018

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“Fall into Fun”

Eureka Scarecrow Festival October 1st - 30th

Nestled in the foothills of the Missouri Ozarks, and just 25 minutes west of St. Louis, the city of Eureka will come alive the entire month of October with colorful and artistic scarecrows posing regally in front of businesses, churches, schools and private sure you stop at the unique restaurants and specialty shops while you are there.

www.eurekascarecrowfestival.com Eureka Missouri...Your Fall Headquarters

Fright Fest at Six Flags and Brookdale Farms Pumpkin Patch and Family Fun/ Red’s Corn Maze Massacre open every weekend in October. Visit the festival website for more special events all month long.

#EurekaScarecrowFestival


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EDITOR’S ITINERARY

DAVID LANCASTER

N E W S T O T R AV E L B Y

The Essential St. Louis The St. Louis cultural season is in full swing in October, offering a head-spining variety of entertainments, from "The Little Foxes" to "The Zombie's of Penzance." We hope the St. Louis Cardinals will be battling in the World Series, but we know the Blues will begin their NHL season. The St. Louis Symphony Orchestra performs all month, and the Fox Theatre brings in magicians, Celtic Thunder, Gladys Knight and Kansas. Do take the time to visit one of the city's most vibrant neighborhoods, Soulard, with lots to see and do day and night. 90 MINUTES IN:

The Soulard Neighborhood

Named for surveyor and refugee from the French Revolution Antoine Soulard, the Soulard neighborhood is one of the city’s oldest and most colorful districts, anchored on the north by Soulard Farmer’s Market (the oldest such institution west of the Mississippi, at its best on Saturday morning), bordered on the south by the Anheuser-Busch Brewery complex (open both for tours and its Biergarten) and inhabited by a madcap Midwest Mardi Gras celebration reported to be the secondlargest in the U.S. In between the market and brewery, the neighborhood’s charming streets are lined with vintage brick residences (rehabbers abound), restaurants, shops and cozy nightclubs. A popular destination for night owls and music lovers, Soulard also rewards daytime visitors with the Farmer’s Market, The Porch (gifts, home furnish-

ings, wine), La Belle Histoire (gifts, decorative accessories, Mardi Gras items, jewelry), and the Soulard Art Gallery, where resident artists display their work alongside art from juried shows. Restaurants cater to foodies from breakfast (Soulard Coffee Garden) to dinner (Mission Taco Joint, Epic Pizza & Suds, Bogart’s Smokehouse, Nadine’s, Joanie’s Pizzeria, International Tap House, Big Daddy's), and

Get going! Explore the city at wheretraveler.com.

include such innovators as Pieces: The St. Louis Board Game Bar & Café and Twisted Ranch, featuring some thirtyone ranch dressings flavoring every item on the menu. Save room for dessert at Sweet Divine (pictured here), a boutique-style bakery and coffee bar offering cupcakes, cookies, donuts, pies, truffles, meringue puffs and more. Soulard really comes alive at night in clubs like The Great Grizzly Bear, Hammerstones and 1860’s Saloon, home to live music every night.

4 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

©D. LANCASTER

in the world

Where is an international network of magazines first published in 1936 and distributed in over 4,000 leading hotels in more than 50 places around the world. Look for us when you visit any of the following cities, or plan ahead for your next trip by visiting us online at wheretraveler.com. UNITED STATES Alaska, Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Charleston, Charlotte, Chicago, Dallas, Indianapolis, Jacksonville/ St. Augustine/Amelia Island, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Maui, Miami, Minneapolis/St. Paul, New Orleans, New York, Oahu, Orange County (CA), Orlando, Philadelphia, Phoenix/Scottsdale, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, St. Louis, Tampa, Tucson, Washington, D.C. ASIA Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore AUSTRALIA Brisbane, Gold Coast, Melbourne, Sydney CANADA Calgary, Canadian Rockies, Edmonton, Halifax, Muskoka/Parry Sound, Ottawa, Toronto, Vancouver, Victoria, Whistler, Winnipeg EUROPE Berlin, Budapest, Istanbul, London, Madrid, Milan, Moscow, Paris, Rome, St. Petersburg


Connect with curiosity. Not To Be Missed This Month First Friday: The Goonies - October 5 SciFest: The Great Outdoors - October 13 GameXPloration - Opens October 13 World of Genomics - October 19 – October 20 Spooktacular - October 25 – October 28


St. Louis

10.18

CONTENTS

SEE MORE OF ST. LOUIS AT WHERETRAVELER.COM

the plan

the guide

04 Editor’s Itinerary

12

The St. Louis cultural season is in full swing with theater, dance, concerts and more.

ENTERTAINMENT

Sting, Shaggy and many more at The Pageant concert venue in The Loop

>>TRIP PLANNER

Visit Soulard, St. Louis' musicclub-heavy neighborhood

08 Hot Dates Blues Hockey It's ice time at Enterprise Center, plus other noteworthy events around town

17

MUSEUMS & ATTRACTIONS

100 years of Redbird history at the Cardinals Hall of Fame & Museum.

21

GALLERIES & ANTIQUES

Nancy Callan, Luanne Rimel and Mary Borgman at Duane Reed Gallery

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SHOPPING

GUIDE TO ST.LOUIS

10

The Spirits of St. Louis Beer, Wine, Cider and more

EAT

CINDER HOUSE CHANNELS SOUTH AMERICA

Great souvenirs and localinterest books at the Missouri History Museum Shop.

BOOKS & SOUVENIRS AT MISSOURI HISTORY MUSEUM SHOP

PLAY

ST. LOUIS BLUES NHL SEASON BEGINS

PROMOTION

Sample the Underground Collection of limited-run beers at the Anheuser-Busch Biergarten

E~STLWM_181000_Cover.indd 1

OCTOBER 2018

wheretraveler.com 9/10/18 5:12 PM

COVER PROMOTION

where now

Anheuser-Busch Brewery & Biergarten invites you to sample the Underground Collection ©ANHEUSER-BUSCH

CONNECT WITH US

READ US ON MAGZTER

6 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

10 The Spirits of St. Louis

Welcome to the world of adult-beverage makers in St. Louis, including microbreweries, giant breweries, distilleries and hard cider makers. Oh, and one root beer manufacturer thrown in for the G-rated crowd. Then there's Missouri wine country some 40 minutes from St. Louis along Highway 94, home to award-winning wines, scenery-rich wineries, live music and good food. Beer lovers will want to grab the lavishly illustrated, exhaustively researched book (above) on St. Louis breweries, available at Left Bank Books.

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DINING

James Beard Awardwinner Gerard Craft opens Cinder House at the Four Seasons Hotel.

MAPS

Explore the city from north to south and A to Z page 38-40

(LEFT TO RIGHT) GETTY IMAGES; ©REEDY PRESS; ©SALVADOR OCHOA

SHOP



WHERE CALENDAR OCTOBER 2018

For more information: wheretraveler.com

Search the full St. Louis calendar at wheretraveler.com

HOT DATES

St. Louis Blues Hockey

5 caption here Best of Missouri Market

Julia Bullock

1 "THE LITTLE FOXES"> THROUGH OCTOBER 14 St. Louis Actors’ Studio presents Lillian Hellman's masterpiece at Gaslight Theatre. www.stlas.org. 358 N. Boyle in the Central West End, 314.458.2978. Map 4-2F.

2 BEST OF MISSOURI MARKET> OCTOBER 5-7 Missouri Botanical Garden hosts this celebration of bounty, featuring over 120 outstanding Missouri food producers and artisans selling produce, baked goods, meats, mushrooms, candies, herbs, nuts, furniture, pottery, baskets, gourds, jewelry, garden ornaments and much more. www.mobot.org. 4344 Shaw Blvd., 314.577.9400. Map 4-4E.

3 ST. LOUIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA > OCTOBER 5-28 Acclaimed orchestra performs in Powell Hall. www.slso.org, 718 N. Grand Blvd., in Grand Center, 314.534.1700. Map 4-2G.

"A DOLL'S HOUSE, PART 2" > OCTOBER 10-NOVEMBER 4 Repertory Theatre of St. Louis presents Lucas Hnath's award-winning sequel to Henrik Ibsen's classic drama. www.repstl.org. Loretto-Hilton Center, 130 Edgar Rd., at Big Bend, on the Webster University campus, 314.968.4925. Map 4-6A 4

JULIA BULLOCK> OCTOBER 24 The acclaimed soprano, recognized by the New York Times as a rising opera star, performs at The Sheldon Concert Hall. www.metrotix. com. 3648 Washington Blvd., in Grand Center, 314.534.1111. Map 4-2G. 5

For a full calendar of events, go to wheretraveler.com/st-louis/local-events 8 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

THROUGH OCTOBER 20 GILBERT & SULLIVAN'S 'THE ZOMBIES OF PENZANCE' New Line Theatre presents the "recently discovered" operetta at the Marcelle Theatre. www. metrotix.com. 3310 Samuel Shepard Dr., 314.534.1111. Map 4-2G. OCTOBER 4-6 JEREMY PIVEN appears at the Helium Comedy Club. www. st-louis.heliumcomedy. com. 1155 Saint Louis Galleria, 314.863.5500. MetroLink-Richmond Heights, Map 4-2A.

Early predictions for the NHL season put the Blues at 25/1 odds to win the Stanley Cup (alongside the Oilers, Kings and Flyers) a feat that has eluded them since they joined the league in 1967. Blues coach Mike Yeo must find ways to integrate a lot of new additions to the roster, including Ryan O’Reilly, one of the league’s most consistent centers. The Blues take on NHL opponents at Enterprise Center: Jets (Oct. 4); Blackhawks (Oct. 6); Flames (Oct. 11); Ducks (Oct. 14); Blue Jackets (Oct. 25); Blackhawks (Oct. 27). www.blues.nhl.com. 14th and Clark streets, , 314.241.1888. Map 2-4C.

Great Things Not to Be Missed

More noteworthy events around town

OCTOBER 11-27 'EVIL DEAD: THE MUSICAL' Stray Dog Theatre presents the over-the-top musical, complete with a "Splatter Zone." www. straydogtheatre.org. 2336 Tennessee Ave., 314.865.1995. Map 4-4G . OCTOBER 19 GLADYS KNIGHT & PEABO BRYSON come to the Fox Theatre. www.metrotix. com. 527 N. Grand Blvd. in Grand Center, 314.534.1111. Map 4-2G. OCTOBER 27 KATHY GRIFFIN The comedian performs her take-no-prisoners standup at the Touhill Performing Arts Center. www.touhill.org. UMSL campus, Florissant Rd., University Blvd. off I-70, exit 240, 314.516.4949. MetroLink UM-St. Louis North, Map 3-3E.

(FROM TOP:©GETTY IMAGES; ©KAT NIEHAUS/MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN; ©BRENT ARNOLD)

OCTOBER 4-27:

TOP STOPS



where now St.Louis

The best brewers, vintners and distillers this month

SIP + SAVOR

The Spirits of St. Louis

Few institutions are as closely associated with St. Louis as the Anheuser-Busch Brewery. Tours of the worldfamous complex run the gamut from free to $25 (totally worth it). The brewery’s Biergarten offers more than 15 beers on tap, beer flights, brewmaster tastings, food and occasional live music. www.budweisertours.com. 12th and Lynch St., 314.577.2626. Map 4-5H.


w w w.wheretraveler.c o m

Beer, Cider, Whiskey More than 60 microbreweries now dot the St. Louis landscape, turning out increasingly innovative brews. We’ve chosen a select few to highlight, along with makers of cider, spirits and root beer.

(OPPOSITE) ©D. LANCASTER; (THIS PAGE FROM LEFT) ©D. LANCASTER; ©HOFBRAUHAUS; ©D. LANCASTER; ©MISSOURI WINE & GRAPE BOARD

Square One Brewery & Distillery

SCHLAFLY TAP ROOM St. Louis’ first microbrewery turns out Schlafly brand beer in a renovated building that appeared in 1981’s “Escape from New York.” Progressive pub grub includes goat cheese rarebit and chili-verde mussels and fries. Lunch and dinner daily. www.schlafly. com. 2100 Locust St., east of Jefferson Ave., 314.241.2337. Map 2-2A. MORGAN STREET BREWERY In a 19th-century warehouse in Laclede’s Landing, Morgan Street offers house-brewed beer, specializing in German lagers, pairing them with an over-achieving menu. Lunch Thur.-Sun., dinner Tue.-Sun. www.morganstreetbrewery.com. 721 N. Second St., 314.231.9970. MetroLinkLaclede’s Landing, Map 2-1F. URBAN CHESTNUT BREWERY This craft brewery, which combines Old World beer styles with revolutionary American beers, offers its unique line of brews with salads, sandwiches and other munchies. Lunch and dinner daily. www. urbanchestnut.com. 4465 Manchester Ave. in The Grove, 314.222.0143. Map 4-3F. 4 HANDS BREWING CO. Microbrewer of tasty beers just south of downtown from

Hofbräuhaus

Divided Sky Rye IPA and a hearty Cast Iron Oatmeal Brown ale. Small selection of bites from wings and pretzels to nachos, burritos and BBQ sandwich. www.4handsbrewery.com. 1220 S. 8th St., 314.436.1559. Map 4-4I. HOFBRÄUHAUS Enormous beer hall in Belleville, Illinois, offers a communal dining experience like the original Hofbräuhaus in Munich with traditional Bavarian cuisine, American tweaks, a kid’s menu and classic Bavarian beers, in the throes of Oktoberfest through Oct. 7. www.hofbrauhausstlouis.com. 123 St. Eugene Dr., 618.800. BEER. Map 1-5G. SQUARE ONE BREWERY & DISTILLERY This renovated historic building is home to both housemade microbrews, like Park Ave. Pale Ale, and a line of spirits, plus fare from Black & Tan Nachos and hot wings to a salmon BLT and stoutbraised pot roast. Lunch and dinner daily. www.squareonebrewery.com. 1727 Park Ave., 314.231.ALES. Map 4-4H. STILL 630 Small-batch distillery near downtown St. Louis offers tours of the facility, a peek

Brick River Cider Company

inside the distillation process and free tastings of its awardwinning line of whiskeys and rums. Besides the bottled product, the shop carries great souvenirs, like the Barrel Master Home Whiskey Aging Kit. Tours ($5) Sa-Su noon-3pm. www.still630.com. 1000 S. 4th St. at Chouteau, 314.513.2275. Map 4-4I BRICK RIVER CIDER COMPANY Missouri’s first hard cider company crafts its product from Midwestern apples, offering a nice range of flavors from semi-sweet to bracingly dry, all available at the ciderworks, formerly Engine House Number 32, along with an elevated pub-grub menu. Lunch and dinner Tue.-Sun. www.brickrivercider.com, 2000 Washington Ave., 314.224.5046, Map 2-2A. FITZ’S Home of St. Louis’ own root beer and cream soda, this colorful spot offers hamburgers, turkey burgers, barbecue, quesadillas and more. Whether the suds are being bottled or not, you’ll be able to check out the machinery that does it through plate-glass windows. Lunch and dinner daily. www. fitzsrootbeer.com. 6605 Delmar Blvd. in The Loop, 314.726.9555. MetroLink-Delmar Loop, Map 4-1C.

WINE COUNTRY

Missouri wine has come a long way since the mid-1960s, when wine production resumed after Prohibition. Today, some 116 Missouri wineries craft mostly French hybrid varietals into a full range of award-winning reds, whites, rosés, ports and dessert wines. Eight Missouri wineries about 40 minutes from St. Louis offer tastings, tours, music and food along picturesque and serpentine Highway 94 (watch for signs). Chandler Hill Vineyards 596 Defiance Rd, 636.798.CORK, www.chandlerhillvineyards.com Sugar Creek Winery 125 Boone Country Lane, 636.987.2400, www.sugarcreekwines.com Montelle Winery 201 Montelle Dr., 888.595.WINE, www.montelle.com Augusta Winery 5601 High St., 888.MOR.WINE, www.augustawinery.com Mount Pleasant Estates 5634 High St., 800.467.WINE, www.mountpleasant.com Noboleis Vineyards & Winery 100 Hemsath Rd., 636.482.4500, www.noboleisvineyards.com Louis P. Balducci Vineyards 6601 S. Highway 94, 636.482.VINO, www.balduccivineyards.com Blumenhof Vineyards and Winery 13699 S. Highway 94, 636.433.2245, www.blumenhof.com

Award-winning Missouri wines

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the guide Entertainment October The Pageant 2,000+-seat concert/comedy venue in The Loop (one of the top concert venues in the U.S.) has lower-level general admission and reserved balcony seating. Upcoming: Sting, Shaggy (shown here, Oct. 1); Henry Rollins (Oct. 2); Iron & Wine (Oct. 3); Dark Star Orchestra (Oct. 4); Goo Goo Dolls (Oct. 5); Hippo Campus (Oct. 9); Lil Xan (Oct. 10); Trampled by Turtles (Oct. 11); Blue October (Oct. 12); Thrice (Oct. 13); Hollywood Babbl-On, Kevin Smith, Ralph Garman (Oct. 14); Billy F. Gibbons (Oct. 18); Rainbow Kitten Surprise (Oct. 19); Iliza (Oct. 20); The Struts (Oct. 23); Chief Keef (Oct. 26); Ludo (Oct. 27); Mayday Parade (Oct.28). www.thepageant.com. 6161 Delmar Blvd., 314.726.6161. MetroLink-Delmar Loop Map 4-1C

HOLLYWOOD CASINO— 120,000 sq. ft. of gaming

action, including 2,100 slots and a poker room. Admission is free. www.hollywoodcasinostlouis.com. I-70 to Earth City Expwy south, right on Casino Center Dr., 855.STL.GAME. Map 1-3E LUMIÈRE PLACE CASINO— Tropicana Entertain-

ment’s casino just north of Laclede’s Landing in the Lumière Place entertainment district features 75,000 sq. ft. of gaming action. Open 8 am W-6 am W. Admission is free. www.lumiereplace.com. 999 N. 2nd St., 314.881.7777. MetroLink Laclede’s Landing Map 2-1F

Nightclubs 1860’S HARD SHELL CAFÉ— Popular Soulard restau-

rant/nightclub packs them in for live music nightly and cajun specialties. Totally informal atmosphere reflects the Big Easy attitude. Music starts at 9 pm M-Sa; afternoons Sa-Sun; Su at 7:30 pm. 1860 S. 9th St., 314.231.1860. Map 4-4H BALLPARK VILLAGE— Sports bar/restaurant/

entertainment complex hosts events, concerts, live-band karaoke, movie nights and more. www. 12 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

stlballparkvillage.com. 601 Clark Ave., 314.345.9481. MetroLink Busch Stadium Map 2-4E BB’S JAZZ, BLUES, & SOUPS— Live music nightly

by top local musicians. Open 6 pm-3 am. $5 cover charge. www.bbsjazzbluessoups.com. 700 S. Broadway, just south of Busch Stadium, 314.436.5222. Map 4-4I BLUEBERRY HILL— A St. Louis landmark music

club and restaurant filled with pop culture memorabilia features national bands. www. blueberryhill.com. 6504 Delmar Blvd., in The Loop, 314.727.4444. Map 4-1C BROADWAY OYSTER BAR— Home to some of

St. Louis’ best homegrown blues bands on the fabulously funky outdoor patio, served alongside Cajun & Creole favorites. Live music nightly. 736 S. Broadway, 314.621.8811. Map 4-4I HAMMERSTONE’S— Soulard club features live music

seven nights a week in a casual atmosphere. Music M 8pm-midnight; Tu 7-11pm, W 9pm-midnight, Th 8pm-midnight, F 8pm-1am, Sa 7pm-1am; Su 4-11:30pm www.hammerstones.net. 9th and Russell, in Soulard, 314.773.5565. Map 4-4H THE MONOCLE AND THE EMERALD ROOM— Live

entertainment, featuring a potpourri of cabaret,

comedy and burlesque, plus classic craft cocktails, is served up in The Emerald Room, the performance space within The Monocle, M-Sa 5 pm-1:30 am, Su 4 pm-midnight. www.themonoclestl.com. 4510 Manchester Ave., 314.932.7003. Map 4-3E

Performances CHAIFETZ ARENA (PERFORMANCES)— Sports/

concert arena hosts big names and varied events. Upcoming: Ms Lauryn Hill (Oct 5); Jake Owen (Oct 19). www.thechaifetzarena.com. 1 S. Compton Ave. in Grand Center, 800.745.3000. Map 4-3G DELMAR HALL—750-seat concert venue brings in

emerging talent. Upcoming: Squirrel Nut Zippers (Oct 2); DeVotchka (Oct 5); Cafe Tacvba (Oct 6); Stryper (Oct 13); Chris Robinson Brotherhood (Oct 16); Steven Page Trio (Oct 17); Russian Circles (Oct 18); The Journey 2 Tour (Oct 19); Joey Graceffa (Oct 20); SOJA (Oct 21); Bruce Cockburn (Oct 26); MAX (Oct 27). www.delmarhall.com. 6133 Delmar Blvd., 314.726.4444. MetroLink-Delmar Loop Map 4-1C ENTERPRISE CENTER (PERFORMANCES)— Sports

arena hosts varied events. Upcoming: Game of Thrones Live Concert Experience (Oct 5); Foo Fighters (Oct 13); Twenty One Pilots (Oct 19);

©SALVADOR OCHOA

Casinos


5IF 1SFNJFS 4U -PVJT %FTUJOBUJPO GPS #SFXFSZ #FFS BOE 'PPE -PWFST


THE GUIDE

Fleetwood Mac (Oct 20); Elton John (Oct 30). www.enterprisecenter.com. 14th and Clark streets, downtown, 314.241.1888. MetroLink-Civic Center Map 2-4C FAMILY ARENA— Sports/concert venue seats 10,000. Upcoming: The Return of Rock of the ‘70s (Oct 5); Smokey Robinson (Oct 6); NXT Live (Oct 11); Jeanne Robinson (Oct 12); The Oak Ridge Boys (Oct 20). www.metrotix.com. 2002 Arena Parkway in St. Charles, 314.534.1111. Map 1-3D THE FOCAL POINT— Intimate venue for traditional

and original music. Tickets generally $10-$25. Upcoming: Maire Ni Chathasaigh & Chris Newman (Oct 5); Brian McNeill (Oct 6); The Lovestruck Balladeers (Oct 11); St. Louis Osuwa Taiko (Oct 12); Tom Hall (Oct 13); Erin Bode (Oct 19); The Burney Sisters, Kip Loui, JJ Loui (Oct 24); Open the Door for Three (Oct 26); Dennis Stroughmatt et L’Esprit Creole (Oct 27). www.thefocalpoint.org. 2720 Sutton Blvd. in Maplewood, 314.781.4200. Map 4-4B FOX THEATRE— Extravagant venue draws big names.

Upcoming: The Illusionists: Live from Broadway (Oct 5-7); Celtic Thunder (Oct 12); 4U: A Symphonic Celebration of Prince (Oct 14); Gladys Knight & Peabo Bryson (Oct 19); Kansas (Oct 20). www. metrotix.com. 527 N. Grand Blvd. in Grand Center, 314.534.1111. Map 4-2G FUNNY BONE COMEDY CLUB— Longtime stand-

up club features the best of local and national acts. Showtimes M-Th 8 pm; F 8 & 10:30 pm; Sa 7:30 & 10:15 pm & midnight; Su 7:30 pm. www. stlouisfunnybone.com. 614 WestPort Plaza, 314.469.6692. Map 1-4E HELIUM COMEDY CLUB— Comedy club in Saint Louis

Galleria brings in top talent. Upcoming: Jeremy Piven (Oct 4-6); Chad Daniels (Oct 11-13); Jess Hiliarious (Oct 24-25). www.st-louis.heliumcomedy.com. 1155 Saint Louis Galleria, 314.863.5500. MetroLink-Richmond Heights Map 4-2A JAZZ AT THE BISTRO— Intimate Grand Center dining

room/music club. Performances at 6, 7:30 & 9:30 pm. Upcoming: Kenny Barron Trio (Oct 3-7); Jim Widner Big Band (Oct 11); Joey Alexander (Oct 12-13); Dr. Lonnie Smith (Oct 17-21); Darius De Haas: A Bernstein Thing (Oct 24-25); John Ellis, Ulysses Owens Jr., Reuben Rogers (Oct 26-27); Stefon Harris & Blackout (Oct 31-Nov 4). www. jazzstl.org. 3536 Washington Ave., in Grand Center, 314.571.6000. Map 4-2G LINDENWOOD UNIVERSITY’S J. SCHEIDEGGER CENTER FOR THE ARTS— Beautiful theater facility brings in big names. Upcoming: Bill Engvall (Oct 5); Postmodern Jukebox (Oct 13). www.lindenwood.

edu/center. 2300 W. Clay St. off Hwy. 94 north of I-70 in St. Charles, 636.949.4433. Map 1-3D NEW JEWISH THEATRE— New Jewish Theatre

mounts productions at the Marvin & Harlene Wool Studio Theater at the JCC. W-Th 7:30 pm, Sa 8 pm, Su 2 pm. $36-$40. Upcoming: Raging Skillet, the Play by Jacques Lamarre (Oct 4-22). www.newjewishtheatre.org. Marvin & Harlene Wool Studio in the JCC’s Staenberg Family Complex, 2 Millstone Campus Dr. off Schuetz Rd. west of Lindbergh Blvd., 314.442.3283. Map 1-4E OFF BROADWAY— One of St. Louis’ best listening

rooms features local and regional blues, folk & roots rock. Tickets generally under $35. Upcoming: A Tribute to the 25 Year Anniversary of Uncle Tupelo’s Anodyne (Oct 4); Ray Wylie Hubbard (Oct 5); Shane Smith & The Saints (Oct 6); Your Smith 14 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

TROLLEY TOURS DAILY ST. LOUIS TROLLEY TOURS

ST. LOUIS FUN TOURS 314-241-1400

ST. LOUIS FUN TOURS

STLOUISFUNTOURS.COM

1 hour Trolley Tours Daily of Downtown and Surrounding Neighborhoods Pick up locations: Ballpark Village & Union Station

stlouistrolley.com

75 Minute Trolley Departs the Front Entrance Lumiere Casino Everyday at 10am, noon & 2pm


E N T E R TA I N M E N T

(Oct 9); Sarah Shook and the Disarmers (Oct 11); Devon Cahill (Oct 12); Robbie Fulks (Oct 17); A Place to Bury Strangers (Oct 18); Cursive (Oct 19); Max Frost (Oct 20); Titus Andronicus, Ted Leo (Oct 23); Los Straitjackets (Oct 25); Jackopierce (Oct 26-27); William Eliott Whitmore (Oct 28); Bob Log III (Oct 30). www.offbroadwaystl.com. 3511 Lemp, two blocks north of Broadway, in the Benton Park neighborhood, 314.773.3363. Map 4-5H OLD ROCK HOUSE— Live music by local and national

talent rocks this 6,000-sq. ft. club. Upcoming: Bodeans (Aug 22); Cowboy Mouth (Aug 24-25); TWRP (Sep 4); Junior Brown (Sep 6); Ashes to

Stardust: The Music of David Bowie (Sep 7); Greg Laswell (Sep 11); Shook Twins (Sep 12); Carbon Leaf (Sep 13); Big Sam’s Funky Nation (Sep 14); Old Salt Union (Sep 15); Piebald (Sep 16); Beats Antique (Sep 19); Parker Milsap (Sep 26); Murder by Death (Oct 3); Billy Strings (Oct 4); Los Lonely Boys (Oct 7); Amy Helm (Oct 11); The David Cook Acoustic Tour (Oct 25). www.metrotix.com. 1200 S. 7th St. at Hickory St., just south of downtown, 314.588.0505. Map 4-4I PLAYHOUSE AT WESTPORT PLAZA— The 250-seat

theater hosts touring shows. Upcoming: Richard Barker: Comedy Hypnosis Show (Sep 6-9); The

Book of Moron (Sep 13-23); The Choir (Sep 19); Darin: Bobby’s Greatest Hits (Sep 26-30); One Funny Mother (Oct 3-7); Rockin’ Chair (Oct 12-13); The Naked Magicians (Oct 19-21); Sex Tips for Straight Women from a Gay Man (Oct 24-27). www. playhouseatwestport.com. 635 West Port Plaza, 314.534.1111. Map 1-4E REPERTORY THEATRE OF ST. LOUIS— The top

regional theater company produces its season at Webster University’s Loretto-Hilton Performing Arts Center. Upcoming: A Doll’s House, Part 2 by Lucas Hnath (Oct 10-Nov 4); Admissions by Joshua Harmon (Oct 24-Nov 11). www.repstl. org. Loretto-Hilton Center, 130 Edgar Rd., at Big Bend, on the Webster University campus, 314.968.4925. Map 4-6A SAINT LOUIS CATHEDRAL CONCERTS— Con-

certs in the magnificent Cathedral Basilica of Saint Louis. Upcoming: Chanticleer (Oct 2); The Queen’s Six (Oct 20). www.stlcathedralconcerts. org. 4431 Lindell Blvd., in the Central West End, 314.533.7662. Map 4-2F THE SHELDON CONCERT HALL— Perfect acoustics

make for a stellar concert experience. Upcoming: Come Fly with Me: The Music of Frank Sinatra, Andy Waggoner (Oct 2); Welcome to Night Vale: A Spy in the Desert (Oct 3); Susan Werner and Ellis Paul (Oct 5); Chamber Music Society of St. Louis (Oct 8, 9, 22); Cornet Chop Suey (Oct 9-10); Puddles Pity Party (Oct 10); Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra (Oct 12); Muny Magic at The Sheldon (Oct 17-18); Jon Batiste (Oct 20); Legendary Melvin Turnage Band (Oct 23); Julia Bullock, soprano (Oct 24). www.metrotix.com. 3648 Washington Blvd., in Grand Center, 314.534.1111. Map 4-2G ST. LOUIS CLASSICAL GUITAR— SLCG presents

guitar artists at the Ethical Society Concert Hall. Upcoming: Tengyue Zhang (Oct 20). www.stlclassicalguitarstlouis.net. 9001 Clayton Rd., just west of the Saint Louis Galleria, 314.567.5566. Map 1-4E ST. LOUIS SHAKESPEARE— St. Louis Shakespeare

presents productions at the Ivory Theater. Upcoming: The Tempest by William Shakespeare (Oct 1221). www.stlshakespeare.org. 7622 Michigan Ave., in south St. Louis, 314.534.1111. Map 1-5F ST. LOUIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA— Acclaimed

orchestra performs in Powell Hall. Upcoming: Beethoven’s Pastoral (Oct 5-6); A Celebration of Muny 100 (Oct 7); Scheherazade (Oct 12-13); Lemony Snicket’s The Composer is Dead (Oct 14); Beethoven’s Triple Concerto (Oct 19-21); Chris Botti (Oct 26); Haydn’s Creation (Oct 27-28). www. slso.org. Powell Hall, 718 N. Grand Blvd., in Grand Center, 314.534.1700. Map 4-2G STAGES ST.LOUIS— St. Louis’ wildly popular summer

stock company presents shows at the Robert G. Reim Theatre. Tickets $44-$66. Upcoming: Oklahoma! (Sep 7-Oct 7). www.stagesstlouis.org. 111 S. Geyer Rd., in Kirkwood 314.821.2407. Map 1-5E STIFEL THEATRE— Renovated 1934 theater (rhymes

with “gleeful”) seats 3,100 and hosts a wide variety of events. Upcoming: Dr. Jordan Peterson: 12 Rules for Life Tour—An Antidote to Chaos (Oct 3); Aha Women’s Speaker Series (Oct 4); Brett Eldredge (Oct 5); Je’Caryous Johnson & Snoop Dogg present Redemption of a Dogg (Oct 19); Alice Cooper (Oct 20); Kidz Bop Live 2018 Tour (Oct 21); Mystery Science Theater 3000 Live! Featuring the Brain (Oct 30). www.stifeltheatre.com. 1400 Market St.,

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THE GUIDE

downtown 800.745.3000. MetroLink Civic Center Map 2-3C STRAY DOG THEATRE— Stray Dog Theatre mounts

productions at Tower Grove Abbey. Tickets $25$30. Upcoming: Evil Dead: The Musical, featuring a “Splatter Zone” (Oct 11-27). www.straydogtheatre. org. 2336 Tennessee Ave., just south of Shenandoah, 314.865.1995. Map 4-4G TOUHILL PERFORMING ARTS CENTER— Outstand-

ing theater facility at University of Missouri-St. Louis hosts varied season of entertainment. Upcoming: Black Violin (Oct 5); Variety Theatre: Disney’s The Little Mermaid (Oct 18-21); Alla Voskoboynikova, Christine Brewer, Bjorn Ranheim (Oct 23); MADCO 2 (Oct 26-27); Kathy Griffin (Oct 27). www.touhill. org. UMSL campus, Florissant Rd., University Blvd. off I-70, exit 240, 314.516.4949. MetroLink UM-St. Louis North Map 1-4F

Public Golf Courses MISSOURI BLUFFS GOLF CLUB— Tom Fazio-

designed course is consistently ranked as one of the best in the Midwest. www.mobluffs.com. 18 Research Park Circle, 800.939.6760. Map 1-3D NORMAN K. PROBSTEIN GOLF COURSE— Three

nine-hole courses in Forest Park designed by Hale Irwin. www.forestparkgc.com. 6141 Lagoon Dr., in the northwest corner of Forest Park, Forsyth entrance, 314.367.1337. Map 4-2C

Special Events EUREKA SCARECROW FESTIVAL—The City of

Eureka, 25 minutes west of St. Louis, welcomes visitors to marvel at its collection of extraordinary scarecrows in front of businesses, churches schools and homes, and to visit the shops, restaurants and other seasonal festivities while they’re here (Oct 1-31). www.eurekascarecrowfestival.com, 113 Hilltop Center Dr., Suite C, 636.938.6062. Map 1-6D GREAT GODFREY MAZE— Two mazes cut in a seven-

acre cornfield—2.4 miles of trails in all—plus zip line, corn crib, jumping pillow, cow train and hay wagon in Robert E. Glazebrook Community Park (Aug 31-Oct 28). Open F-Su. Admission $4-$6; free for kids 5 and under. www.godfreyil.org. 1401 Stamper Lane, Godfrey, Illinois, 800.ALTON. IL. Map 1-1F THE DARKNESS— Superbly crafted, 30,000-square-

foot haunted house includes outdoor scream zone, haunted house, Monster Museum hair-raising special effects, escape rooms, Zombie Laser Tag and much more (Sep 22-Nov 3). Hours vary and get progressively longer closer to Halloween. www.scarefest.com. 1525 S. 8th St., 314.631.8000. Map 4-4!

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ity with 5 racing venues is home to INDYCAR, NASCAR and NHRA races, plus the Richard Petty Driving Experience, Gateway Kartplex and more just 5 minutes from downtown St. Louis. www.gatewaymsp.com. 700 Raceway Blvd., 618.215.8888. Map 1-4G 16 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

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THE GUIDE

Museums+Attractions Cardinals Hall of Fame & Museum Over 100 years of St. Louis Cardinals history (including 11 World Series championships) are illuminated through photos, trophies, videos and memorabilia in the 8,000 sq. ft. museum within Cardinals Nation in Ballpark Village. Great place to visit while the Cardinals are (hopefully) going after number 12. Open daily 10 am-6 pm. $12 adults, $10 seniors/military, $8 children 4-15, free children 3 and under. stlouis. cardinals.mlb.com/. 601 Clark Ave., just north of Busch Stadium, 314.345.9880. MetroLink Busch Stadium Map 2-4E

Family Fun CITY MUSEUM— Four floors of wildly eclectic

experiences and a rooftop theme park, one of the most memorable places in St. Louis. Open W-Th 9 am-5 pm; F-Sa 9 am-midnight; Su 11 am-5 pm. Admission $12 (ages 3 and up); after 5 pm F & Sa $10. www.citymuseum.org. 750 N. 16th St., 314.231. CITY. Map 2-1C FOREST PARK— One of the largest municipal parks

in the U.S. (bigger than Central Park) covers 1,300 acres at Kingshighway and I-64 (Hwy 40). Home to several of St. Louis’ top attractions: Saint Louis Art Museum, Saint Louis Zoo, Saint Louis Science Center and Missouri History Museum. Visitors Center offers information, lockers, food, self-guided iPod tour, bike rental at 5595 Grand Drive. Interactive online map at www.Forestparkmap.org. www.forestparkforever.org. 314.367.7275. MetroLink-Forest Park Map 4-2D FOREST PARK BOATHOUSE— Pedal boats and

canoes and are available for rental at $20 per hour. Open daily at 11 am. Food available at Boathouse Café. www.boathousepaddleco.com. Forest Park, on Government Dr. 314.367.2224.. Map 4-2D

©D. LANCASTER

GATEWAY ARCH & GATEWAY ARCH RIVERBOATS—

The Gateway Arch experience includes the Journey to the Top ($13-$10), Monument to the Dream movie ($3), new Gateway Arch Museum and the Arch Store, accessed through the new entrance just east of the Old Courthouse. Gateway Arch

There’s a lot more going Riverboats offer sightseeing and dinon this October. ner cruises on replicas of 19th-century Visit us online: steamboats available daily: one-hour wheretraveler.com cruise $20 for adults, $10 for children ages 3-15. Specialty cruises all month. www.gatewayarch.com. 4th & Chestnut St., 877.982.1410. MetroLink-8th & Pine Map 2-3F

($4), James S. McDonnell Planetarium shows ($6-$5). Open M-Sa 9:30 am-5:30 pm, Su 11 am-5:30 pm; open first F until 10 pm. Parking $10. www.slsc.org. 5050 Oakland Ave., just west of Kingshighway, 800.456.7572 or 314.289.4444. Map 4-3E

SAINT LOUIS ZOO— One of the top zoos in the

MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN— Seventy-nine

acres of trees, gardens and conservatories, a mustsee for any visitor, any time of year. Free tours of the garden at 11 am daily. Garden open 9 am-5 pm daily (open 7 am W and Sa). Admission $12 adults, free children 12 and under. www.missouribotanicalgarden.org. 4344 Shaw Blvd., 314.577.5100 or 800.642.8842. Map 4-4E POLE POSITION RACEWAY INDOOR KARTING— With

a top speed of 45 mph, these electric karts deliver genuine racing excitement in this 56,000-squarefoot, indoor racing facility. Adults and kids 48 inches and taller welcome anytime. Open M-Th 11 am-9 pm, F 1-11 pm, Sa 11 am-11 pm, Su 11 am-6 pm. www.polepositionraceway.com. 8800 Watson Rd., near Grant Rd., 314.925.7545. Map 1-5E SAINT LOUIS SCIENCE CENTER— Investigate,

explore, and engage with science through fun and interactive learning experiences. 700+ permanent galleries, live science demonstrations and special exhibitions, plus the exhibit Grow! that follows food from field to table. General admission to the Saint Louis Science Center is free; fee for the OMNIMAX® Theater ($10-$9), Discovery Room

U.S. (rated #1 in Zagat survey), houses more than 16,000 animals, many of them rare and endangered. Admission to the Zoo and most exhibits is free. Admission to some ticketed exhibits are free the first hour the zoo is open. Open daily 9 am-5 pm. Parking $15. www.stlzoo.org. In Forest Park; enter park at any entrance and follow signs., 314.781.0900. Map 4-2D

Museums & Historical Sites AMERICAN KENNEL CLUB MUSEUM OF THE DOG—

Spacious museum displays paintings, prints, sculpture and photographs of man’s best friend through the centuries. Admission $6 adults; $4 seniors; $1 children 5-14. Free for children under 5. Open TuSa 10 am-4 pm; Su 1-5 pm, closed holidays. www. museumofthedog.org. Located in Queeny Park, 1721 S. Mason Rd., 314.821.DOGS. Map 1-4E CAHOKIA MOUNDS— 2,200-acre state historic

site preserves the remains of the largest preColumbian city north of Mexico, including the 100-foot high Monks Mound. Outstanding

FREE ADMISSION IS THE RULE at the major attractions in Forest Park: Saint Louis Art Museum, Saint Louis Zoo, Saint Louis Science Center, Missouri History Museum. w w w.wh e re t rave le r. com 17


THE GUIDE interpretive center features an introductory film and exhibits on the civilization that flourished here. Open Tu-Su 9 am-5 pm. Suggested donation $7 adults; $15 family. www.cahokiamounds.org. 30 Ramey Dr., off Collinsville Rd., near Collinsville, IL. 618.346.5160. Map 1-3G CAMPBELL HOUSE MUSEUM— Built in 1851 and

listed on the National Register of Historic Places, this extravagant 3-story home was the residence of renowned fur trader Robert Campbell. Open W-Sa 10 am-4 pm, Su noon-4 pm. $8 adults, free children 12 and under. www.campbellhousemuseum.org. 1508 Locust St., downtown, 314.421.0325. Map 2-2C CHATILLON-DEMENIL MANSION MUSEUM— Beauti-

fully preserved antebellum Greek Revival mansion, built 1849-1863. Admission $8 adults, $5 children under 12. Open Mar-Dec, W-F 11 am-2 pm, Sa 11 am-3 pm. www.demenil.org. 3352 DeMenil Place, in the Benton Park neighborhood, at the east end of Cherokee Antique Row, 314.771.5828. Map 4-5H CONTEMPORARY ART MUSEUM ST. LOUIS— Non-

collecting museum is housed in an airy, minimalist building. On view: Basquiat Before Basquiat: East 12th Street, 1979-1980; Sanford Biggers; William Downs: Sometimes It Hurts; Superflex: European Union Mayotte; Jennifer West: Emoji Piss Film (Sep 7-Dec 30). Open W 11 am-6 pm, Th-F 11 am-9 pm, Sa 10 am-5 pm. Admission is free. www.camstl.org. 3750 Washington Blvd. at Spring Ave., in Grand Center, 314.535.4660. Map 4-2G DANIEL BOONE HOME & HERITAGE CENTER— Boone

began building this four-story home in 1803 and finished it in 1810. A pioneer village includes a church and period homes. Open daily 8:30 am-5 pm. Tour $8 adults; $6 seniors; $5 children 5-12. www.sccmo.org/1701/The-Historic-Daniel-BooneHome-at-Linden. 1868 Hwy F, near Defiance, Missouri. 636.798.2005. Map 1-3C THE ECONOMY MUSEUM—The award-winning

museum inside the historic Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis explains the economy and your role in it through nearly 100 interactive exhibits. Admission is free. Open M-F 9 am-3 pm. www.stlouisfed.org/ inside-the-economy-museum/. 1 Federal Reserve Bank Plaza, Broadway and Locust St. 314.444.7309. MetroLink Convention Center Map 2-2F FIELD HOUSE MUSEUM— Built in 1845, this 3-story

structure was the childhood home of Eugene Field, the “Children’s Poet.” Field’s father, Roswell, initiated the lawsuit that led to the Supreme Court’s Dred Scott Decision. On view: Let’s Play Ball: Historic Games of America’s Favorite Pastime (Jul 20-Jan 20). Admission $10 adults, $5 children 7-16, free children 6 & under. Open W-Sa 10 am-4 pm; Su noon-4 pm. www.efhouse.org. 634 S. Broadway, 314.421.4689. MetroLink-Busch Stadium Map 2-5E GRIOT MUSEUM OF BLACK HISTORY— Features life-

size likenesses of Dred and Harriet Scott, George Washington Carver and other African Americans of note with a Missouri connection. Open W-Sa 10 am-5 pm. Admission $7.50 for adults; $3.75 for children under 12. www.thegriotmuseum.com. 2505 St. Louis Ave., north St. Louis, 314.241.7057. Map 4-1H INTERNATIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY HALL OF FAME AND MUSEUM— The IPHF preserves, promotes

and educates on the history of photography through its collection of photographic tools and images and special exhibits. On view: Baseball: America’s Game, Art and Objects; Baseball in St. Louis: The Photography of George Burke and George Brace (Jun 6-Oct 13); IPHF 2018 Award 18 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

and Hall of Fame Induction Exhibition (Oct 26-Jan 26). Open Tu-Th 11 am-6 pm, F 11 am-5 pm (until 9 pm First Fridays), Sa 11 am-4 pm. $5 adults, $3 students/seniors, free children under 18, free on First Fridays. www.iphf.org. 3415 Olive St., in Grand Center, 314.535.1999. Map 4-2G LAUMEIER SCULPTURE PARK AND MUSEUM— Some

60 pieces of contemporary sculpture by artists of international stature are arranged throughout the 105-acre facility, one of the nation’s major contemporary sculpture parks, plus exhibits in the Adam Aronson Fine Arts Center. Admission free. The park is open daily from 8 am to sunset. www. laumeiersculpturepark.org. 12580 Rott Rd., off Lindbergh Blvd., 314.615.5278. Map 1-5E MISSOURI CIVIL WAR MUSEUM— New museum at

Jefferson Barracks is the state’s largest educational complex dedicated exclusively to the study of Missouri’s role in the Civil War. Open daily 9am-5pm. Admission $7 adults, $6 seniors, $5 children 5-12, free kids under 5. www.mcwm.org. 222 Worth Rd. in Jefferson Barracks, 314.845.1861. Map 1-5F MISSOURI HISTORY MUSEUM— Museum features

three levels, restaurant, gift shop and exhibition galleries showcasing regional history and traveling exhibitions. Open daily 10 am-5 pm, Tu 10 am-8 pm. Admission to the museum is free. On view: Panoramas of the City (through Dec 2); Muny Memories (through Jun 2, 2019); The St. Louis Rogues’ Gallery (Sep 22-Mar 10). www.mohistory. org. Lindell Blvd. and DeBaliviere in Forest Park, 314.746.4599. MetroLink-Forest Park Map 4-2D MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY RELIGIOUS ART (MOCRA)— The world’s first museum of interfaith

contemporary art reflects a diversity of religious and spiritual beliefs. Admission is free, $5 donation suggested. Open Tu-Su 11 am-4 pm. On View: 25 marks a quarter-century of exhibits with one that features the work of 25 artists (opens Sep 16). www.slu.edu/mocra. Located on the St. Louis University campus, just west of the clock tower, 314.977.7170. Map 4-2G NATIONAL BLUES MUSEUM— Outstanding new

complex contains 16,000 square feet of interactive exhibition space tracing the history and world-wide impact of the blues, a 100-seat theater for live performances, a calendar of public programming, a record-your-original-blues-riff interactive element and traveling exhibits. www.nationalbluesmuseum. org. 615 Washington Ave., 314.925.0016. Map 2-2E OLD COURTHOUSE— Built from 1839-1862, the Old

Courthouse (part of the Gateway Arch National Park) features restored courtrooms, history exhibits and the beautifully decorated dome. Admission is free. Open daily. Open 7:30 am-8 pm. www.nps. gov/jeff. 11 N. Fourth St. at Market St., downtown, 314.655.1700. MetroLink-8th & Pine Map 2-3F PULITZER ARTS FOUNDATION— Arts institution is

housed in a minimalist building by Tadao Ando. Exhibits are accompanied by frequent programs. On View: Ruth Asawa: Life’s Work (Sep 14-Feb 16). Admission is free. Open W & Sa 10 am-5 pm, Th-F 10 am-8 pm. www.pulitzerarts.org. 3716 Washington Blvd. in Grand Center, 314.754.1848. Map 4-2G SAINT LOUIS ART MUSEUM— One of the top

comprehensive art museums in the U.S. features exhibits from nearly every period and national origin, with extensive holdings in pre-Columbian and German art, and an outstanding collection of American art from 1800 to 1945. The museum maintains a full schedule of lectures, tours, films

and performances. On view: Balance and Opposition in Ancient Peruvian Textiles (Jun 14-Nov 25); Kehinde Wiley (Oct 19-Feb 10). Admission to the museum and its permanent collection is free, fee for some special exhibits. Open Tu-Su 10 am-5 pm, F open until 9 pm. www.slam.org. Located in Forest Park near the Forsyth Blvd. entrance, 1 Fine Arts Dr., 314.721.0072. Map 4-2D SCOTT JOPLIN HOUSE STATE HISTORIC SITE—

National Historic Landmark is the only building in existence where the ragtime king is known to have composed some of his famous melodies. Downstairs museum traces the composer’s life and career; upstairs apartment has been furnished to reflect the period. Open M-Sa 10 am-4 pm. $4 adults; $2.50 children 6-12, free children under 6. www.mostateparks.com/scottjoplin. htm. 2658 Delmar Blvd., west of Jefferson Ave., 314.340.5790. Map 4-2H ST. LOUIS UNION STATION— This National Historic

Landmark features free walking tours, free St. Louis Union Station Memories Museum, restaurants, entertainment, specialty stores and the magnificent Grand Hall. Fire and Light Show daily at the Lake. www.stlouisunionstation.com. 18th & Market streets, downtown, 314.421.6655. MetroLink-Union Station Map 2-4B THOMAS SAPPINGTON HOUSE MUSEUM— The Sap-

pington House, built in 1808 by the son of George Washington’s bodyguard, is an outstanding example of Federal architecture, on the National Register of Historic Places. Open for tours W-F 11 am-2 pm; Sa by appointment. Admission is $5 for adults, $1 for children. The Barn Restaurant serves breakfast and lunch Tu-Su, 6 am-2 pm. www. sappingtonhouse.org/. 1015 S. Sappington Rd., between Big Bend and Watson in south St. Louis County 314.822.8171. Map 1-5E ULYSSES S. GRANT NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE—

The home in south St. Louis County where Ulysses S. Grant lived off and on during his adult life is open for tours daily 9:30am-5pm. Grounds include five carefully restored historic structures and Visitor’s Center. www.nps.gov/ulsg/index. htm. 7400 Grant Rd, just north of Gravois Rd., 314.842.1867. Map 1-5F WORLD CHESS HALL OF FAME— Nonprofit collect-

ing institution explores the dynamic relationship between art and chess through exhibitions, interpretive programs and performances in the 3-story museum. Open Tu-W 10 am-5 pm, Th-F 10 am-6 pm, Sa 10 am-5 pm, Su noon-5 pm. Admission is free. www.worldchesshof.org. 4652 Maryland Ave. in the Central West End, 314.367.9243. Map 4-2E

Neighborhoods CENTRAL WEST END— The commercial hub along

Euclid Ave. includes art galleries, antique shops, boutiques and cafés. www.cwescene.com. 314.361.2850. Map 4-2E CLAYTON— The eminently walkable business district

in this regional commercial center pairs high-rise office towers and street-level retailers. www.ciclayton.mo.us. 314.290.8473. Map 4-1A DOWNTOWN— Shopping, dining, historic homes,

sports, concerts, nightlife, convention center, gambling, attractions and riverboats are all located within walking distance of the Gateway Arch. The Downtown Trolley connects downtown destinations for a one-day ticket of just $2. www. downtownstl.org. 314.436.6500. Map 2


MUSEUMS+ATTRACTIONS

GRAND CENTER— Ten-block arts district, located

at Grand Blvd. and Lindell, offers a formidable collection of museums and performance venues. Restaurants abound. www.grandcenter.org. 314.533.1884. Map 4-2G LACLEDE’S LANDING— Nine square blocks of

renovated 100-year-old buildings just north of the Gateway Arch offer sightseeing during the day and dining/nightlife/casinos after dark. www.lacledelanding-stlouis.com. 314.241.5875. Map 2-1F LAFAYETTE SQUARE— The oldest publicly owned

park west of the Mississippi (Lafayette Park) is surrounded by magnificent, restored, Victorianera mansions. Walk, gawk, eat/drink and shop at a growing commercial district. www.lafayettesquare. org. 314.772.5724. Map 4-4H THE LOOP— Located along Delmar Blvd. east and

west of Skinker Blvd., The Loop is perhaps the most engaging neighborhood in the St. Louis area, with art galleries, cinema, nightclubs, concert venues, iconoclastic shops, bowling lanes, St. Louis Walk of Fame and multi-cultural collection of restaurants. www.visittheloop.com. 314.727.8000. Map 4-1C MAPLEWOOD— The pedestrian-friendly business

district along Manchester Rd. and Sutton just east of Big Bend Blvd. offers fun shopping in gift shops and unusual, locally owned boutiques and lots of dining choices and gourmet stores. Map 4-4B SOUTH GRAND— A globetrotting cavalcade of in-

ternational restaurants and an interesting blend of unique, locally owned shops line Grand Blvd. just south of Tower Grove Park, one of the city’s best green spaces. www.southgrand.org. Map 4-5F THE HILL— Blue-collar, Italian neighborhood south-

east of Forest Park offers the best collection of Italian restaurants in the Midwest. Specialty Italian grocery stores and bakeries make The Hill worth a daytime visit. www.thehillstl.com. Map 4-4D

Religious Sites CATHEDRAL BASILICA OF SAINT LOUIS— Complet-

ed in 1914, the cathedral’s Byzantine interior glows with the largest collection of mosaics under one roof in the world. Open M-Sa 7am-5pm, Su 7am6pm. Museum and shop open daily 10am-4pm. Guided tours M-F 10am-3pm. www.cathedralstl. org. 4431 Lindell Blvd. in the Central West End, 314.373.8200. Map 4-2F OLD CATHEDRAL— Consecrated in 1834, the Greek

Revival structure has been completely renovated with original furnishings. Open daily 9:30am-5pm, Sa until 6pm. Mass M-F 7am & 12:10pm; Sa 7am; Su 8 & 10:30am, noon & 5pm. 209 Walnut, on the grounds of the Gateway Arch, 314.231.3250. MetroLink-Busch Stadium Map 2-4F

Transit & Tours DOWNTOWN TROLLEY— The Downtown Trolley

makes the rounds of downtown St. Louis M-F 5:30 am-midnight and on Sa from 7 am-midnight, Su 11 am-6:30 pm. A one-day ticket costs just $2 for adults, $1 for kids, seniors and disabled. www. STLAdventurePass.com. 314.231.2345. Map 2 METROLINK LIGHT RAIL & METROBUS— MetroLink

light-rail system travels from Lambert Airport to Scott Air Force Base, and from Shrewsbury to Emerson Park, from approximately 5:30 am to midnight, M-Sa; Su 6am-11pm, indicated on our maps with a solid red line. The two lines overlap from w w w.wh e re t rave le r. com 19


THE GUIDE

Forest Park to Emerson Park, so pay attention to the destination on your train. Two-hour pass from Lambert Airport $4; one-ride ticket $2.50 adults, $1.10 seniors/kids; one-day pass for MetroLink and MetroBus $7.50. MetroLink tickets and One-Day Passes available at Ticket Vending Machines (TVM) at all stations. Tickets, passes and transit route maps available at the Metro Store, 8th & Pine. Multi-ride tickets and tickets purchased elsewhere must be time-and-date stamped at the station in the red validator before boarding. Downtown Trolley (indicated with a purple line on the DT Map) costs $2 adults, $1 kids for a 1-day pass. www. metrostlouis.org. Call 314.231.2345 in Missouri; 618.271.2345 in Illinois. SAINT LOUIS TROLLEY & CARRIAGE CO.— Trolley

tours from Union Station and Ballpark Hilton $17 adults, $15 Seniors, $10 children. Horse-drawn carriages offer leisurely, unobstructed views of many downtown sights. Rides for two: 15-minutes $30, 30-minutes $50, one-hour $95; $5 for each additional person. Reservations available but unnecessary. Princess Carriage Tours of downtown or Laclede’s Landing add an extra level of glamour; 15-minute tour for two $50; call 314.621.3334 for reservations. www.stlouiscarriagecompany. com. Look for carriages on downtown streets 314.621.3334. 314.241.1400. Map 2

Wineries & Day Trips ALTON, ELSAH, GRAFTON— Located just north of

the confluence of the Mississippi and Missouri rivers, Alton, Ill., offers a day’s worth of sight-seeing, shopping and antiquing. Sites around town include the Lincoln-Douglas Debate, Robert Wadlow (the “Alton Giant”), Underground Railroad, National Great Rivers Museum. Hwy. 100 takes you past spectacular scenery to the river towns of Elsah and Grafton and Pere Marquette State Park. Hwy. 367 north across the Clark Bridge to Alton. www. visitalton.com. Alton Visitors Center, 200 Piasa, 618.465.6676 or 800.ALT.ONIL. Map 1-1F AUGUSTA WINERY— Award-winning winery in

Augusta, America’s first official viticultural district, offers a tasting room and shaded patio. Augusta’s 2016 Norton won Best Nortion at the 2018 Missouri Wine Competition. Open M-F 10am-5:30pm, Sa 10am-6pm, Su noon-6pm. www.augustawinery. com. 5601 High St., 888.MOR.WINE. Map 1-4C ST. CHARLES— St. Charles was Missouri’s first capital

in 1821, and the entire National Register Historic District on the banks of the Missouri River has been preserved and restored. Historic South Main St. is lined with more than 125 specialty shops, restaurants, museums and attractions, including Missouri’s First State Capitol State Historic Site, Foundry Art Centre and the Lewis & Clark Boathouse and Nature Center. I-70 west across the Missouri River, N. Fifth St. exit, right on Boone’s Lick Rd. to the riverfront. www.historicstcharles.com. Tourism Center at 230 S. Main, 800.366.2427. Map 1-3E WASHINGTON, MISSOURI— Nestled on the south

bank of the Missouri River, Washington, Missouri, serves as the gateway to wine country. Downtown features gifts stores, restaurants, antiques, the Missouri Photojournalism Hall of Fame and the Washington Historical Society Museum. Visitor Center at 301 Front St. www.washmo.org. west of St. Louis at the intersection of Highway 100 and Highway 47, 888.7.WASHMO. Map 1-4B

20 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

Now Booking Events! | 888.595.WINE | www.Montelle.com

Where do you want to go? Find the best of the city


THE GUIDE

Galleries+Antiques

Duane Reed Gallery The Central West End gallery focuses on regional and internationally known contemporary artists in a variety of fine art and craft media, including Rudy Autio, Michael Eastman, Jun Kaneko, Marvin Lipofsky, Joseph Piccillo, Nancy Rice and many more. On view through Oct. 13: Nancy Callan (glass sculptures), Luanne Rimel (photographic textiles), Mary Borgman (shown here, charcoals on mylar). Open Tu-Sa 10 am-5 pm and by appointment. www.duanereedgallery.com. 4729 McPherson Ave., 314.361.4100. Map 4-2E

Antiques CHEROKEE ANTIQUE ROW— Six blocks of shops

along Cherokee St. directly west of the historic Chatillon-DeMenil Mansion offer an abundance of fine antiques, funky collectibles, bric-a-brac, novelties, books, radios and oddities as well as art galleries and restaurants. www.cherokeeantiquerow. com. Cherokee St. between Jefferson and Lemp, in Benton Park, 314.772.9177. Map 4-5H

PORTRAIT OF OFFICER DANA, 57 X 43 INCHES, ©MARY BORGMAN

THE GREEN SHAG MARKET— A wide variety of used

furniture and accessories from 60 dealers. New items daily. Open M 11am-4pm, W-Su 10am-5pm. www.thegreenshagmarket.com. 5733 Manchester Ave., east of Hampton Ave. 314.646.8687. Map 4-3D R. EGE ANTIQUES— Mid-century ephemera, alchemy,

outsider art, ecclesiastical art, industrial artifacts and other unusual merchandise, not to be missed by the discriminating collector. Highly recommended for originality of vision. Open Th-Sa 10am-4pm or by appointment. www.regeantiques.com. 1304 Sidney St., in Soulard, 314.773.8500. Map 4-5H ROCKET CENTURY— A carefully edited collection of

furniture, art, accessories, kitchenware, tableware and more from the century beginning with the 1920s. Open M, W-Sa 11am-6pm, Su 11am-5pm. www.rocketcentury.com. 3189 S. Grand Blvd., 314.875.0705. Map 4-5F SHELTON DAVIS ANTIQUES— Specialists in fine an-

tique Continental, English and American furniture, decorative arts, oil paintings, silver, china, and

crystal. sheltondavisantiques.com/. 4724 McPherson Ave. in the Central West End, 314.361.2610. Map 4-2E

There’s a lot more going on this October. Visit us online: wheretraveler.com

SOUTH COUNTY ANTIQUE MALL— Larg-

est multi-dealer mall in Missouri features 400 display booths and 225 showcases. Open daily 10am-6pm. www.missouriantiquemalls. com. 13208 Tesson Ferry Rd., south of I-270, 314.842.5566. Map 1-6E ST. CHARLES ANTIQUE MALL— Voted the #1 antique

mall in St. Charles County, featuring 250 display booths and 225 showcases. Open daily 10am-6pm. www.missouriantiquemalls.com. 3004 S. St. Peters Pkwy., St. Peters, MO 636.939.4178. Map 1-2D ST. CLAIR ANTIQUE MALL— Dozens of dealers under

one roof. Open daily 10am-6pm. www.missouriantiquemalls.com. 315 Salem Pl., Fairview Heights, Illinois, near the interchange of I-64 and Hwy. 159, 618.628.1650. Map 1-3G WARSON WOODS ANTIQUE GALLERY— Impres-

sive assortment of more than 200 quality dealers features some of the best antiquing in the St. Louis area—certainly the most variety at high quality. Open daily 10am-6pm. www.missouriantiquemalls.com. 10091 Manchester Rd., at Sappington, 314.909.0123. Map 1-5E

Art Galleries ART SAINT LOUIS— Downtown co-op gallery

presents themed, juried shows in a variety of

media by regional artists. On-site coffee shop invites lingering. Open M 10 am-4 pm; T-F 10 am-5 pm; Sa 10 am-4 pm. On view: Pink Pearl (Sep 22-Oct 25). www. artstlouis.net. 1223 Pine St., downtown, 314.241.4810. Map 2-3C

ARTISANS IN THE LOOP— Boutique gallery shows

work in many media from local and regional artists. Open Tu-Sa 11 am-6 pm, Su 11 am-5 pm. www.artisansintheloop.com. 6511 Delmar Blvd., 314.833.3540. Map 4-1C ATRIUM GALLERY— Contemporary art by interna-

tional and regional artists. On view: Perspective, Caroline Weld, John Schwartzkopf (Sep 13-Nov 10). Open Th-Sa 10 am-5 pm, Tu-W by appointment. www.atriumgallery.net. 4814 Washington Ave., in the Central West End, 314.367.1076. Map 4-2E BRUNO DAVID GALLERY— Clayton gallery shows

top local and national artists, some of international stature. Open Tu-F 11 am-6 pm, and by appointment. On view: Yvonne Osei, Justin Henry Miller, Jon Howard Young, E.R.O. (Aug 31-Sep 29). www.brunodavidgallery.com. 7513 Forsyth Blvd., 314.696.2377. Map 4-1B CHEROKEE STREET GALLERY— New gallery on

Cherokee St. hosts exhibitions that explore the intersection of nature and iconography. On view: Samo©...Al Diaz, work by Basquiat collaborator Al Diaz (opens Sep 8). Open Th-Sa 10 am-6 pm. www.cherokeestreetgallery.com. 2617 Cherokee St.,. Map 4-5G

COME FOR THE FOOD TRUCKS, STAY FOR THE GLASSWORKING DEMOS at Third Degree Glass Factory’s Third Friday Open House, Oct. 19, 6-10 pm. w w w.wh e re t rave le r. com 21


THE GUIDE

COMPONERE GALLERY— Contemporary fine art and

craft gallery features regional and national artists. Open M-Th 11 am-5 pm; Fri & Sa 11 am-9 pm; Su 1-5 pm. www.componere.com. 6509 Delmar Blvd., in The Loop, 314.727.6333. Map 4-1C CRAFT ALLIANCE CENTER OF ART + DESIGN IN THE LOOP— Fine craft gallery with a national reputation

also includes a gift shop loaded with hand-crafted items. Open Tu-Th 10 am-5 pm; F-Sa 10 am-6 pm; Su 11 am-5 pm. On view: Artists-in-Residence 10 Year Anniversary Exhibition (Aug 24-Oct 21). www. craftalliance.org. 6640 Delmar Blvd., in The Loop, 314.725.1177. Map 4-1C FOUNDRY ART CENTRE— Resident artists work in

glass-fronted studio galleries and juried exhibits are shown in a 5,000-sq-ft. exhibition space, a 1940-era industrial building at the north end of Main St. in St. Charles, Mo. Open Tu-Th 10 am-8 pm; F-Sa 10 am-5 pm; Su noon-4 pm. On view: Out on a Limb (Oct 5-Dec 28). www.foundryartcentre. org. 520 N. Main Center, I-70 west to N. 5th St., exit right on Boone’s Lick Rd., to Main St., left to N. Main, 636.255.0270. Map 1-3E THE GREENBERG GALLERY— Longtime art dealer

Ronald Greenberg (since 1972) shows work by contemporary masters like Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Motherwell, Lorna Simpson, Huma Bhabha, Mark di Suvero, Helen Frankenthaler, Richard Diebenkorn and others in a sleek space in Clayton. Open M-F 10 am-5 pm. www.thegreenberggallery.com. 230 S. Bemiston Ave., 314.361.7600. Map 4-2A HOFFMAN LACHANCE CONTEMPORARY— Maple-

wood gallery features local, regional, and national contemporary artists. Open F-Sa noon-3pm and by appointment. www.hoffmanlachancefineart.com. 2713 Sutton Blvd., in Maplewood, 314.398.9636. Map 4-4B HOUSKA GALLERY— Artist Charlie Houska shows

his colorful, bold, fun and intense art plus work by other St. Louis artists at his Central West End Gallery. www.houska.com. 4728 McPherson Ave., 314.496.1377. Map 4-2E KODNER GALLERY— Specializes in works by Ameri-

can and French Impressionists, Masters of the Old West, 17th-20th Century American and European landscape, genre and regionalist painters and contemporary masters. Open M-F 9:30am5:30pm; Sa 10am-4pm and by appointment. www. kodnergallery.com. 9650 Clayton Road in Ladue, 314.993.4477. Map 3-6C PHILIP SLEIN GALLERY— Gallery specializes in

contemporary painting by local, national and emerging artists, including Jamie Adams, Cheonae Kim, Louis Cameron, Valerie Jaudon, Catherine Howe, John Dilg, Chuck Webster and others. On view: Andrea Belag: Beachcomber (Sep 13-Oct 13). Open Tu-Sa 10 am-5 pm and by appointment. www.philipsleingallery.com. 4735 McPherson Ave., in the Central West End, 314.361.2617. Map 4-2E PROJECTS + GALLERY— Commercial art space

features work that blurs the boundaries of traditionally understood disciplines and practices. On view: To Survive on This Shore (Sep 6-Oct 10); Cry of Victory and Short Walks to Freedoms, group exhibit (Oct 18-Nov 24). Open W-Sa 11 am-5 pm. www.projects-gallery.com. 4733 McPherson Ave., 314.696.8678. Map 4-2E THIRD DEGREE GLASS FACTORY— Glass studio and

gallery space also shows non-glass art. Upcoming: Third Friday Open House features hands-on glass 22 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

The Estate Jewelry Experts 17 N. Meramec Ave.,Clayton (314)721-4548 www.Timekeepersclayton.com

9495 Olive, Ste. C,Olivette (314)991-0994 www.TimekeepersSTL.com


GALLERIES+ANTIQUES

Modernism

School of Paris

Ceramics

Regionalism

Featuring The Very Best American and European Artwork

creations, food, live music, cash bar (Oct 19 6-10 pm). Open M-Sa 10 am-5 pm. www.stlglass.com. 5200 Delmar Blvd., east of Union in the Central West End, 314.367.4527. Map 4-1E TOM HUCK’S EVIL PRINTS— Printmaker Tom Huck,

whose raucous, profane and wildly entertaining “rural satire” large-scale prints are collected by museums around the world, maintains a working studio/gallery where he produces and sells his work, priced from $15 to $4,500. Open Sa 11 am-5 pm or by appointment. www.evilprints.com. 1931 Washington Ave.,. Map 2-2B WILLIAM SHEARBURN GALLERY— Gallery specializes

Abstract

Western

Impressionism

Traditional

in internationally known artists like Milton Avery, Chuck Close, Andy Warhol, George Condo, Richard Diebenkorn, Lucien Freud, Alex Katz, Robert Longo, Elizabeth Peyton and others. Open M-F noon-5 pm and by appointment. www.shearburngallery.com. 665 S. Skinker Blvd., across from Forest Park 314.367.8020. Map 4-2C

Institutional Galleries JILL A. MCGUIRE GALLERY AT RAC— Street-level gal-

Pop Art

Glass

Surrealism

Missouri Artists

A Trusted Family Tradition in Fine Art Services for Nearly 50 Years

lery space at the regional arts-funding headquarters is devoted to local artists. Open M-F 10 am-3 pm. www.racstl.org/experience-art/rac-gallery/. 6128 Delmar Blvd., 314.863.5811. MetroLink Delmar Loop Map 4-1C MAY GALLERY AT WEBSTER UNIVERSITY— Contem-

9650 Clayton Road in Ladue - (314).993.4477 - kodnergallery.com

porary photography by local and national photographers. Open M-F 9 am-9 pm; Sa-Su noon-5 pm. On view: Rebecca Barnard: Abstractions (Oct 5-26). www.webster.edu/maygallery. Located on the second floor of the Sverdrup Business/Technology Complex on the Webster University campus, 8300 Big Bend Blvd., 314.961.2660 ext. 7673. Map 4-6A SCHMIDT ART CENTER— Handsome space at

Southwestern Illinois College features regional and national artists. Open Tu-F 11 am-5 pm, F until 8 pm, Sa 10 am-2 pm. On view: Donald Bevirt; Kimber Mallett and Melody Evans; Don Koleson (Aug 23-Oct 5); Brandon Barnes; Charles Clary; Dominic Finocchio; Mario Methot (Oct 25-Dec 14). www. swic.edu/theschmidt. 2500 Carlyle Ave., Belleville, 618.235.2700 ext. 5215; 800.222.5131 ext. 5215. MetroLink College. Map 1-4G THE SHELDON ART GALLERIES— Six exhibit spaces

Antique Malls W W A G  M R. S. L, MO  ..

S. C A M  S. S. P P. S U S. P, MO  ..

S C A M  T F R. S. L, MO  ..

S. C A M  S P F H, IL  --

at The Sheldon Concert Hall are devoted to photography, jazz history, architecture, St. Louis artists and children’s art. Open Tu noon-8 pm; W-F noon-5 pm; Sa 10 am-2 pm; one hour before concerts. On view: Re/Constructing Identity: Zlatco Cosic, Jose Guadalupe Garza and Miriam Ruiz, Priya Kambli, and Rachel Youn (Oct 5-Jan 26); St. Louis, A Musical Gateway: The Balkans, India and Mexico (Oct 5-Apr 13); The Immigrants: Works by Master Photographers (Oct 5-Jan 12); Growing Up: International Vertical Gardens (Oct 5-Jan 19); Martin Brief: A Brief History of Time (Oct 5-Jan 5). www.thesheldon.org. 3648 Washington Ave., in Grand Center, 314.533.9900. Map 4-2G

Special Events HISTORIC SHAW ART FAIR— Juried art fair in one of

All Open Seven Days a Week • 10am – 6pm www.missouriantiquemalls.com

St. Louis’ most charming neighborhoods features work by 135 artists from around the U.S. in a variety of media (Oct 6-7) Sa 9 am-5 pm, Su 10 am-5 pm. Admission $7 adults, kids under 14 free. www. shawartfair.org. Flora Place at Tower Grove Ave., near Missouri Botanical Garden. Map 4-4F w w w.wh e re t rave le r. com 23


THE GUIDE

Shopping Missouri History Museum Shop The Missouri History Museum stands as one of the best places to visit first in St. Louis, since it offers a comprehensive look at large and small moments in the city’s history. It also offers one of St. Louis’ best souvenir stores, packed with local-interest books, gifts, puzzles, toys, décor, jewelry, T-shirts, children’s books, posters and much more. Admission to the museum and shop is free. Open daily 10 am-5 pm, Tu 10 am-8 pm. www.mohistory.org. Lindell Blvd. and DeBaliviere in Forest Park, 314.746.4599. MetroLinkForest Park Map 4-2D

BYRD DESIGNER CONSIGNMENT BOUTIQUE— Top

designer labels and one-of-a-kind couture pieces are the stock-in-trade at this luxury consignment shop. Open M 11 am-6 pm, Tu-F 10 am-6 pm, Sa 10 am-5 pm, Su 11 am-4 pm. www.byrdstyle.com. 8825 Ladue Rd., 314.721.0766. Map 1-4F CHUCK’S BOOTS— you want ‘em, they’ve got ‘em.

But we’re not just talking cowboy boots (though there are seemingly acres of those). There are also work boots, motorcycle boots, fashion boots and more from names like Lucchese, Tony Lama, Dr. Marten, Justin, Merrell, Harley Davidson and many more. Western and motorcycle apparel available, too, with friendly service to help you navigate all that terrain. Open 9 am-8 pm M-F, 9 am-7 pm Sa, noon-5 pm Su. www.stlouisbootstores. com. Two locations: 300 Biltmore Dr. in Fenton, 636.349.6633 Map 1-4E; 5859 Suemandy Dr., 636.970.2668 Map 1-2D DESIGNER RESALE BOUTIQUE— Mid Rivers Mall

retailer specializes in better-label ladies’ clothing, shoes, purses, jewelry and accessories. Open M-f 10 am-6 pm, Sa 10 am-5 pm, Su noon-4 pm. www. thedesignerresaleboutique.com. 344 Mid Rivers Mall Dr., 636.279.3968. Map 1-3D PINK MAGNOLIA— Splashy dresses, sportswear and

more bearing the distinctive resortwear signature of Lilly Pulitzer, plus a kids’ area. Accessories from wallets to iPhone cases, too. Open 10 am-5 pm

Book Stores

There’s a lot more going on this October. Visit us online:

UNION STUDIO—All St. Louis products

all the time at this stylish shop near Missouri Botanical Garden (ironically unaffiliated with nearby Union Loafers Cafe), including clothing, art, neckware, body products, ceramics, books, jewelry, leather goods, chocolate, stationery and more. Lots of walkable dining options. Open Tu 10 am-3 pm, W-F 10 am-5 pm, Sa 10 am-3 pm. www. stlunionstudio.com. 1605 Tower Grove Ave., 314.771.5398. Map 4-3F

wheretraveler.com

AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS BOOKSTORE— Your one-stop shop for any archi-

tectural topic under the sun, including local interests from Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright to St. Louis architecture for kids info; great gift selection, too. Open M-F 9 am-4 pm. www.aia-stlouis. org. 911 Washington Ave., 314.231.4252. Map 2-2D LEFT BANK BOOKS— St. Louis’ best independent

bookstore hosts frequent readings and signings, with inventory including belles lettres, poetry, literature, children’s books and used books. Open M-Sa 10 am-10 pm, Su 11 am-6 pm. www. left-bank.com. Open 10 am-10 pm M-Sa, Su 11 am-6 pm at 399 N. Euclid Ave., at McPherson, 314.367.6731. Map 4-2E

Gifts & Collectibles CARDINALS AUTHENTICS SHOP— Nothing against

the mass-produced, fan-fave souvenirs, but here you can take your love of the game to the next level: authentic, game-used memorabilia, like jerseys, batting gloves, baseballs, bats and a ton more, plus, autographed collectibles from current and former players. Open daily 10 am-6 pm. stlouis. cardinals.mlb.com/stl/cardinals-nation/shop.jsp. Ballpark Village, 601 Clark St., St. Louis, MO 63102, 314.345.9851. MetroLink-Busch Stadium Map 2-4E

Home Goods & Furnishings CENTRO MODERN FURNISHINGS— Classic modern

furnishings. Carries furniture, lighting, accessories, rugs and bathroom paraphernalia by makers such as B & B Italia, Herman Miller for the Home, Artemide, Alessi and more. Open M-Sa 10 am-6 pm, Su noon-4 pm (Cards: MC V) www.centroinc.com. 4727 McPherson Ave., east of Euclid, 314.454.0111. Map 4-2E CRATE AND BARREL— The popular purveyor of

contemporary and colorful basics for home stocks everything from ramekins to recliners in its expansive showroom. Open M-Sa 10 am-8 pm, Su 11 am-6 pm. (Cards: AE DS MC V) www.crateandbarrel.com. 1 The Boulevard, across from Saint Louis Galleria, 314.725.6380. Metrolink-Richmond Heights Map 4-2A

FOR THE HEIGHT OF FALL FASHION head over to Plaza Frontenac, home to Saks Fifth Avenue, Michael Kors, J. Jill, Eileen Fisher, Kate Spade, Neiman Marcus and more. 24 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

©D. LANCASTER

Apparel & Accessories

M-Sa. www.pinkmagnoliashop.com. 9810 Clayton Rd., 314.997.6161. Map 1-4E


SHOPPING

Jewelry THE SILVER LADY— The owners of this jewelry gem

have a knack for finding beautiful, distinct items. With an emphasis on dramatic sterling silver pieces and stunning semiprecious pendants, the selection here is sure to please. Hours vary by location. www. thesilver-lady.com. Open W-F noon-6 pm, Sa 10 am-6 pm, Su 11 am-4 pm, 4736 McPherson Blvd., 314.367.7587. Map 4-2E; Open Tu-F 11 am-6 pm, Sa 10 am-6 pm, Su noon-5 pm at 6364 Delmar Blvd., 314.727.0704. Metrolink-Delmar Loop Map 4-1C; 7318 Manchester Rd., 314.720.9315. Map 4-4B TIMEKEEPERS— Remarkable collection of European

and American antique clocks, watches, music boxes and jewelry are on display at this collector’s dream store, operating since 1979. Open Tu-F 10am-5pm; Sa 10am-4pm. www.timekeepersclayton.com. 17 N. Meramec Ave., in Clayton, 314.721.4548. Map 4-1A; 9495 Olive Blvd., Suite C, 314.991.0994. Map 1-4E

Malls/Shopping Districts FENTON LOCATION ST. PETERS LOCATION

HWY 30, GRAVOIS 636.349.6633 5859 SUEMANDY DR. 636.970.2668

PLAZA FRONTENAC— Elegant shopping center

houses prestigious retailers—Saks Fifth Ave., Neiman Marcus, Tiffany & Co., Sur la Table and Coach—a cinema, and several signature dining options. Open 10 am-8 pm M-F, 10 am-7 pm Sa, noon6 pm Su. www.plazafrontenac.com. Lindbergh Blvd. and Clayton Rd., 314.432.0604. Map 1-4E SAINT LOUIS GALLERIA— The Galleria features spe-

cialty retailers such as Lucky Brand Jeans, Apple Store and Anthropologie as well as flagship stores for Macy’s and Dillard’s, restaurants catering to every taste, and a cinema. Open M-Sa 10 am-9 pm, Su 11 am-6 pm. www.saintlouisgalleria.com. 1155 St. Louis Galleria, 314.863.5500. Map 4-2A ST. LOUIS PREMIUM OUTLETS— Offers 90 designer

and name brands at 25%-65% savings. Stores include Aldo, Kate Spade New York, Tommy Hilfiger, Vera Bradley, and Sperry. Open M-Sa 10 am-9 pm, Su 10 am-7 pm. www.premiumoutlets.com/ outlets/outlet.asp?id=108. 18521 Outlet Boulevard, 314.399.8150. Map 1-4C WEST COUNTY CENTER— Popular mall at I-270 and

Manchester Rd. features all the top shops: Chico’s, American Eagle Outfitters, Bath & Body Works, Banana Republic, Brooks Brothers, J. Jill, Pandora, Sephora, J.C. Penney, The North Face, Macy’s, Barnes & Noble, Coach, Ann Taylor, Harry & David, Nordstrom and many more. Open M-Sa 10 am-9 pm, Su 11 am-6 pm. www.westcountycenter.com. 80 West County Center, 314.288.2020. Map 1-5E

Specialty Food & Wine DIGREGORIO’S MARKET— Gourmet foodstuffs shop-

ping in a famed Italian neighborhood, with a wide selection that includes olives, imported candies & sweets, tomatoes and dried pastas, plus fresh cheeses and meats. Open M-Sa 8 am-5:30 pm. www.digregoriofoods.com. 5200 Daggett Ave., 314.776.1062. Map 4-4E Monday – Saturday 10 – 5 9810 Clayton Rd 314.997.6161 Pinkmagnoliashop.com Facebook.com/PinkMagnoliaSt.Louis Instagram.com/Pinkmagnoliastl

KAKAO CHOCOLATE— The chocolatiers here are

serious about their chocolate concoctions, whether dark, milk, white or even lavender- or chipotleladen: truffles, confections, barks, drink mixes, ice creams, marshmallows and more. Open M-Sa 10 am-7 pm, Su noon-5 pm. www.kakaochocolate. com. 7272 Manchester Rd., open 10 am-7 pm M-Sa, 10 am-5 pm Su, 314.645.4446. Map 4-4B w w w.wh e re t rave le r. com 25


ST. LOUIS ST YLE A SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT SECTION

The Silver Lady Fleur de Lis The symbol of St. Louis since 1600. Celebrating Inspired, Original, Distinct Silver Jewelry for 32 years! Central West End 4736 McPherson Ave. 314.367.7587 The Loop 6364 Delmar Blvd. 314.727.0704 Maplewood 7318 Manchester Road 314.720.9315 www.shopthesilverlady.com #shopthesilverlady

Cherokee Antique Row Historic. Independent. Unique. Stroll along colorful Cherokee Street from Jefferson to Lemp and discover beautifully restored buildings filled with all kinds of wonders and curiosities. You’ll find plenty of antique shops (of course!) as well as charming restaurants, salons, art supplies, rare books, records, vintage clothing and so much more. Best time to shop: 11-5 Everyday. Check out Cherokee Antique Row on Facebook, Instagram, and right here in South City.

Designer Resale Boutique Ladies only consignment boutique for over 30 years. We carry sizes 0-3X and put out over 1000 items per week. Visit our second location, DRB², in Lake Saint Louis, where we carry both women’s & children’s clothing. DRB: 344 Mid Rivers Mall Dr. St. Peters, MO 63376 Mon-Fri 10-6, Sat 10-5 & Sun 12-4 DRB²: 11108 Veterans Memorial Pkwy Lake Saint Louis, MO 63367 Wed-Fri 10-6 & Sat 9-2 www.thedesignerresaleboutique.com www.facebook.com/drboutique

Cardinals Authentics Cardinals Authentics is your exclusive source for game used uniforms and equipment, as well as, unique, autographed and limited edition memorabilia. The Cardinals Nation location is open daily from 10am – 6pm. You can also shop 24-7 online at www.cardinalsauthentics.com. 1st Floor Cardinals Nation Located in Ballpark Village St. Louis, MO 314.345.9851 Busch Stadium Located in Ford Plaza near Gate 6 St. Louis, MO 314.345.9851


THE GUIDE

Dining Cinder House James Beard Award-winner Gerard Craft (who has created some of the city’s top restaurants) takes inspiration for his newest venture, Cinder House, from his childhood nanny, Dia, and her traditional South American cuisine. The menu offers wood-fired dishes featuring locally sourced ingredients, like grilled lamb ribs with lime, soy, garlic and honey; grilled chicken croquettes; Dia’s cheese bread with prosciutto and lardo; and feijoada with Calabrese sausage, braised beef, smoked pork belly, braised pork cheek, black beans, collard greens, oranges and farofa topped with chimichurri. Seating indoors and out on the 8th floor of the Four Seasons Hotel. Open for breakfast, lunch and dinner daily from 6:30 am. www.cinderhousestl.com, 999 N. 2nd St., 314.881.5759. Map 2-1F

Airport Area CHARLIE GITTO’S— Italian. Casino location for

this long-time St. Louis classic brings favorites like penne Borghese and ziti fra diavolo, plus five varieties of veal and several steak cuts, close to the gaming floor. D (daily). www.charliegittos.com. 777 Casino Center Dr., inside Hollywood Casino at Riverport, 314.770.7663. Map 1-4C

Benton Park/ Cherokee Area LEMP MANSION RESTAURANT— American. In the

Lemp Mansion, once home to Lemp Brewery magnates and now St. Louis’ quintessential haunted house. Classics such as Beef Wellington and Steak Diane served, plus chicken, seafood and pasta. Open for lunch M-F, for dinner Tu-Sa (Sept-Dec), Th-Sa (Jan-Aug). Family-style chicken dinner on Su from 11:30 am-8 pm. Murder mystery dinner theater F & Sa night ($48.95). (Cards: AE DC DS MC V) www.lempmansion.com. 3322 DeMenil Place, north of Cherokee, 314.664.8024. Map 4-5H

©D. LANCASTER

SIDNEY STREET CAFE— American. Neighborhood

bistro—exposed brick, lots of wood—is on the foodie map with a James Beard Award Best Chef: Midwest for chef/owner Kevin Nashan, who opts for seasonal, locally-sourced (including his own garden) creations that reflect his French training and time spent in Spain and Santa Fe. Entrées $18-29. Open for D (Tu-Sa). www.

sidneystreetcafe.com. 2000 Sidney St., 314.771.5777. Map 4-5H

Central West End

There’s a lot more going on this October. Visit us online: wheretraveler.com

THE CUP— Desserts/Sweets. Daily,

fresh selection of cupcakes with buttercream frosting, in flavors like double chocolate, gold rush and peanut butter cup, plus rotating specialties from lemon drop to mocha cappuccino. Open M-Th 10 am-8:30 pm, F-Sa 9:30 am-10 pm. www.cravethecup.com. 28 Maryland Plaza Rear, 314.367.6111. Map 4-2E DRUNKEN FISH— Japanese/Sushi. See listing

under “West Port Plaza.” Open for lunch and dinner daily. drunkenfish.com. 1 Maryland Plaza, 314.367.4222. Map 4-2E GAMLIN WHISKEY HOUSE—American. Nationally

recognized as a top whiskey bar, this modern take on the American steakhouse tradition brings together dining (shrimp & grits, STL-style pork steaks, grass-fed meatloaf) and drinking (on-tap cocktails, the signature Manhattan, bourbon slushes, and more). Open for L & D daily, plus Su brunch. gamlinwhiskeyhouse.com. 236 N. Euclid Ave., 314.875.9500. Map 4-2E HANDCRAFTED BY BISSINGER’S—Wine & Chocolate Bar. Owned and operated by 23 City Blocks

Catering, this wine & chocolate bar (selling the stellar confections of Bissinger’s Chocolatier) also serves an eclectic menu of non-chocolate items from morning to deep into the night. The wine wall

offers a globe-spanning selection by the glass or less. Open M-Th 7 am-11 pm, F 7 am-12:30 am, Sa 8 am-12:30 am, Su 10 am10 pm. www.bissingers.com. 32 Maryland Plaza, 314.367.7750. Map 4-2E

LLYWELYN’S PUB— Pub. Of the Celtic persuasion, this long-time favorite offers traditional pub atmosphere and fare, including house-made chips, soups and a popular steak and cheese sandwich. There are 25 beers on tap and 25 bottled, including the best domestic, import and craft beers. Also look for fish and chips, Welsh rarebit and other Celtic specialties. Open for lunch and dinner daily. www.llywelynspub.com. 4747 McPherson east of Euclid, 314.361.3003. Map 4-2E MARY ANN’S TEA ROOM—Tea Room. Step back into

circa 1890 England for lunch with dishes like crab bisque, salmon salad and a myriad of desserts and teas in a beautiful atrium. Or enjoy afternoon tea (high tea) between 11am and 4 pm. Vintage London taxicab offers transportation service within the neighborhood. L (daily). www.maryannstearoom. com. 4732 McPherson Ave., 314.361.5303. Map 4-2E 1764 PUBLIC HOUSE— Eclectic. Local flavors set the

stage for this St. Louis-centric eating and drinking establishment (the name refers to the year the city was founded), which features modern twists to local favorites. www.1764pub.com. 39 N. Euclid Ave.,. Map 4-2E PICKLES DELI— Delicatessen. Classic deli serves

up faves including pastrami, corned beef brisket,

VISIT HACIENDA MEXICAN RESTAURANT and see why it has flourished for 50 years, 9748 Manchester Rd. in Rock Hill, 314.962-7100, www.haciendastl.com. w w w.wh e re t rave le r. com 27


THE GUIDE

DINING

Cuban and BLT sandwiches, plus salads, sides like cole slaw and fruit salad, and homemade cupcakes for dessert. Open 9 am-7 pm M-F, 10 am-3 pm Sa. www.picklesdelistl.com. 22 N. Euclid 314.361.3354. Map 4-2E SUB ZERO VODKA BAR— Eclectic. Super-chic vodka

bar features 28-foot ice bar, some 500 premium vodkas kept at zero degrees, HD plasma TV, the latest martini technology and beautiful people. Popular food items include specialty sushi rolls and black Angus beef burgers. Open for L, D and late night daily. www.subzerovodkabar. com. 308 N. Euclid Ave., in the Central West End, 314.367.1200. Map 4-2E TAZÉ MEDITERRANEAN STREET FOOD— Mediterranean. See listing under Downtown.

www.tazestreetfood.com. 8 1/2 Euclid Ave., 314.932.7182. Map 4-2E

Chesterfield CHARLIE GITTO’S— Italian. See listing under “The

Hill Area.” L (M-F), D (daily). www.charliegittos.com. 15525 Olive Blvd., 636.536.2199. Map 1-3D

Clayton BARCELONA— Spanish. Classic Clayton (smallish

space, vibrant colors and a beautiful crowd) with a hip twist—tapas including marinated Spanish olives and mussels in spicy tomato sauce. For dessert, try the honey-orange cream-filled three milks cake. Inventive cocktails include Sangre

28 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

do Toro, spice-infused vodka. Tapas $3.25-$7.95. Open for lunch and dinner M-Sa, dinner only Su. www.barcelonatapas.com. 34 N. Central, 314.863.9909. Map 4-1A THE CROSSING— Eclectic. Attractively decorated

with French/Italian techniques influencing the kitchen, perennially acclaimed as one of the best in town, serving a farm-to-table menu of seafood, chops, chicken and beef tenderloin, plus the gottaget-it roasted beet salad. Dinner entrées $18-$42. Open for L (M-F), D (M-Sa). www.fialafood.com. 7823 Forsyth, 314.721.7375. Map 4-1A RUTH’S CHRIS STEAK HOUSE— Steaks. Wine Specta-

tor Award of Excellence. Local outpost of national chain has a handsome, posh dining room with window booths, traditional tables and elevated banquettes. Specialties include filet, cowboy rib eye and T-bone (served still sizzling), barbecued shrimp, seafood gumbo. Open for dinner nightly. www.ruthschris.com. 1 N. Brentwood (at Clayton), 314.783.9900. Map 4-1A SARDELLA— . This Clayton restaurant by James

Beard Award-winner Gerard Craft features an Italian-inspired menu of hand-stuffed pastas and a large selection of appetizers and roasted meats entrées. Sardella also offers breakfast and lunch dishes with an extensive coffee program from Sump Coffee, creative grain bowls, pastries and fresh juices as well as salads and sandwiches. Dinner large plates $15-$28. Open for L (M-F), D (nightly), brunch (Sa-Su). www.nichestlouis.com. 7734 Forsyth Blvd, 314.773.7755.

Downtown 360— Eclectic. Riding high (ha!) off a nod placing it

among the top rooftop bars of the world, this sleek spot atop the Hilton at the Ballpark delivers tasty food (snacks like truffled popcorn and addictive house fries, plus smoked pork belly BLT sliders and Gulf shrimp with pappardalle) and tempting cocktails, from a most enviable perch. D (daily), 21 and older after 7 pm. www.360-stl.com. 1 S. Broadway, 314.241.8439. Map 2-3E THE BOOM BOOM ROOM— French. Leave the kids at

home and step out with your friends and/or lovers to this burlesque-themed bistro, where a French menu (including duck confit, a poutine burger and maple-bacon beignets) is the backdrop for specialty cocktails and scintillating performances. Experience full burlesque shows on Fridays to dinner-and-a-show seatings on Saturdays, and even roving cirque, aerial, and other surprises during dinner on other evenings. Check the online calendar and choose your own adventure! D (W-Sa), open for special events only (Su-Tu). www.theboomboomroomstl.com. 500 N. 14th St., 314.436.7000. Map 2-2C BREWHOUSE HISTORICAL SPORTS BAR— American.

Beer-lover’s spot serves up eclectic local brews and a chef-driven, scratch-made menu of upscale bar food like in-house BBQ using locally-sourced ingredients. Happy hour Su-Th 3-6 pm ¬Ω off select appetizers & $3 featured draft beers. L and D (daily). stlouisarch.regency.hyatt.com. 315 Chestnut


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• Outdoor Beer Garden • Authentic German Brewery • Traditional Bavarian Cuisine • Live Music 7-Days a Week

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Sept. 22 - Oct. 7 AT AMERICA’S LARGEST HOFBRÄUHAUS

HofbrauhausStLouis.com (618) 800-BEER


THE GUIDE St., inside Hyatt Regency, 314.259.3270. MetroLink8th & Pine Map 2-3F CARDINALS NATION—American. Upscale sports-

bar atmosphere, and menu offerings including wings, pizza, salads, sandwiches, steaks and seafood. Plenty of Cardinals lore and décor to appeal to baseball fans! L and D (daily), brunch (Su). www.cardinalsnation.com. 601 Clark St., 314.345.9880. Map 2-4E DRUNKEN FISH—Japanese/Sushi. Everything from

sushi to traditional Japanese dishes is offered at this award-winning hot-spot. Stop by for a red dragon roll or check out the happy hour for an eclectic variety of cocktails. L and D (daily). www. drunkenfish.com. Ballpark Village, 601 Clark St., 314.899.0500. MetroLink-Busch Stadium Map 2-4E GRAND HALL—American. The setting itself is a

jaw-dropper: the soaring, vaulted great room of the city’s historic Union Station, opened in 1894 to a then train-crazed public. These days, it serves as the lobby/lounge for the adajacent hotel and conference center, and an extensive restoration has ushered in state-of-the-art entertainment (an immersive, digital projection on the ceiling and walls that cycles through more than 10 themed narratives) and a menu of dinner and drinks befitting the elegance: railroad-inspired cocktails are a great start, and eats include oysters, toasted ravioli, and tuna tar-tar. D (daily). www.grandhallstl.com. 1820 Market St., inside Union Station, 314.621.5262. Map 2-3B HIRO—Asian. A stylish dining room and equally chic

food melds together many culinary traditions (think Japanese, Indonesian, Vietnamese, and Thai, for starters) with dishes like authentic ramen, a dim sum dumpling platter, lemongrass pork chop, and Korean fried rice. Sake and creative specialty cocktails, too. Open for L & D Tu-Su, plus Su brunch. www.hiroasiankitchen.com. 1401 Washington Ave., 314.241.4476. Map 2-2C IMO’S— Pizza. This is the mothership of the STL-style

pizza: cracker-thin crust, Provel cheese and all. Cut it into squares and you’ve gone native! (Pastas, like baked lasagna or mostaccioli, also available, along with sandwiches and salads.) Dine-in or delivery available. L and D (daily). Check the website to find the closest Imo’s location (80 in St. Louis) near you. www.imospizza.com. 904 S. 4th St., 314.421.4667. Map 2-5E KEMOLL’S— Italian. Entrées popular in this classically

decorated room include veal porcini and filet Douglas; try the carciofi fritti (fried, fresh artichokes) as a starter. Open for D, M-Sa. Free garage parking. www.kemolls.com. 211 N. Broadway in the Metropolitan Square Bldg., 314.421.0555. Map 2-3E LUCAS PARK GRILLE— Eclectic. Wine Spectator

Award of Excellence. Popular gathering spot for downtown dwellers and other urbanites, with intimate dining areas and a bustling bar. Dishes include tuna tartare, cornmeal-dusted calamari, Hawaiian sea bass and pepper-grilled flat iron. Dinner entrées $15-$30. Open for lunch and dinner daily, late-night on weekends, plus weekend brunch. www.lucasparkgrille.com. 1234 Washington Ave., 314.241.7770. Map 2-2D MAGGIE O’BRIEN’S RESTAURANT & SPORTS BAR— Irish. Legendary pub nect to Union Station serves

up steaks, sandwiches, pizza and other upgraded pub grub among lots of TVs and memorabilia. Dinner entrées $8.99-$21.99. Open for L & D daily, open until 3 am after Blues games and major DT 30 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

• Only Tex-Mex restaurant on the hot Washington Ave. Loft District, Downtown St. Louis • Classic Mexican and unique modern specialties • Fresh ingredients • Large portions • Local favorite!

1235 Washington Ave. • Downtown St. Louis 314.621.2700 www.rosalitascantina.com


DINING events. www.maggieobriens.com. 2000 Market St. at 20th., one block west of Union Station, 314.421.1388. MetroLink-Union Station Map 2-3A MEDINA MEDITERRANEAN GRILL— Mediterranean.

Come to Medina for Greek, Mediterranean, Middle Eastern sandwiches, meat and vegetarian dishes like falafel, shawarma, gyros, hummus, salads and more. Sandwiches, salads and bowls $4.75-$9.95. Open M-Sa for l & d, Su 11 am-5 pm. www.medinagrill.com. 1327 Washington Ave., 314.241.1356. Map 2-2C PICKLES DELI— Delicatessen. See listing un-

der “Central West End.” Downtown location also serves breakfast. Open M-F 7 am-3 pm. www.picklesdelistl.com. 200 North Broadway, 314.241.2255. Map 2-2E ROSALITA’S CANTINA— Mexican & Tex-Mex. Fresh

take on Tex-Mex, whether you order made-atyour-table guacamole, barbacoa beef-stuffed empanadas, shrimp and mango street tacos, or any of the other inventive dishes you’ll find. Specialty margaritas, too. L and D (daily), happy hour 3-7 pm M-F. rosalitascantina.com. 1235 Washington Ave., 314.621.2700. Map 2-2D RUTH’S CHRIS STEAK HOUSE— Steaks. See listing

under “Clayton.” D (daily). (Cards: AE DC DS MC V) www.ruthschris.com. 315 Chestnut St., 314.259.3200. MetroLink-8th & Pine Map 2-3F SEN THAI ASIAN BISTRO— Thai. Delicious Thai

cuisine, pleasant décor and an expansive menu, ranging from hearty soups and curries to broth noodle dishes, pad Thai, sesame BBQ pork and a can’t-miss, drunken noodles. Dinner entrées $12-$19. Open for lunch M-F, dinner daily. www. senthaibistro.com. 1000 Washington Ave., 314.436.3456. Map 2-2D SUGARFIRE SMOKE HOUSE— Barbeque. Located

next door to the National Blues Museum, Sugarfire delivers smoked brisket, pulled pork, local grass-fed burgers and a pimiento cheese BLT. That’s right, and there are also root beer floats and Key lime pie waiting. Open for L & D daily. www.sugarfiresmokehouse.com. 605 Washington Ave., 314.394.1720. MetroLink-Convention Center Map 1-1E TAZÉ MEDITERRANEAN STREET FOOD— Mediterannean. Fast-casual from the tandoor! Pick a wrap or

bowl and customize it all the way down to the mango, harissa, tzatziki or tahini sauces, and choose a side (we’d be remiss not to recommend the fries). Caramelized onion and balsamic hummus is not to be missed. L and D (M-Sa). www.tazestreetfood. com. 626 Washington Ave., 314.254.7953. Map 2-2E TIN ROOF—American. Energetic outpost of Nashville

original features live music, big-screen TVs, burgers, steak sandwiches, quesadillas, wings, big salads and more. L (Tu-Su), D (daily). www.tinroofstlouis.com. 1000 Clark Ave., Map 2-4D TONY’S— Italian. If there’s a dining award, this

legendary restaurant has won it, from AAA Four Diamond Award to the Wine Spectator Award of Excellence. Elegant dining room, legendary service and complete wine cellar. Entrées $22-$47. Open for dinner T-Sa. www.tonysstlouis.com. 410 Market St., 314.231.7007. Map 2-3F

Forest Park Area BOATHOUSE— American. A fast-casual dining

venue overlooking the Post-Dispatch Lake in Forest Park offers popular menu items from the w w w.wh e re t rave le r. com 31


THE GUIDE

Sugarfire Smoke House group of restaurants. L and D (daily), brunch (Su). www.boathouseforestpark.com. 6101 Government Dr., in Forest Park, 314.367.2224. Map 4-2D IMO’S— Pizza. See listing under “Downtown.”

Dine-in or delivery available. L and D (daily). www.imospizza.com. 1000 Hampton Ave., 314.644.5480. Map 4-3C PANORAMA— Eclectic. The aptly named restaurant

at the Saint Louis Art Museum does indeed provide sweeping views of the park outside, through a wall of floor-to-ceiling windows. On the menu, plenty of farm-to-table options, from grass-fed tenderloin to seared lamb chianti. L (Tu-F) 11 am-2 pm, brunch (Sa-Su) 10 am-3 pm. www.slam. org/dining/. One Fine Arts Dr., in Forest Park, 314.655.5490. Map 4-2D

Grand Center THE DARK ROOM— Wine Bar. Wine bar and restau-

rant in the Grandel Theatre also functions as a photo gallery, with exhibits curated by the International Photography Hall of Fame. Live music most nights. Open W-Su for L & D, late night limited menu, Su music brunch, patio. www.thedarkroomstl.com. 3610 Grandel Square, 314.531.3416. Map 4-2G TRIUMPH GRILL— Eclectic. A wide and crowd-pleas-

ing menu, with appetizers like pulled-pork nachos and unadilla flatbread, which make way for soups, chopped salads, and entrées including steak, shrimp and grits, and cherry-soaked duck breast. Sleek, motorcycle-inspired decor. Brunch and L (daily), D (Tu-Sa). www.triumphgrill.com. 3419 Olive St., 314.446.1801. Map 4-2G

Illinois CLEVELAND-HEATH— Eclectic. The 35-minute drive

from downtown St. Louis to this James Beard Award-nominated restaurant in Edwardsville, Illinois, is totally worth it for what the chef/owners (CIA/Napa grads) call “gourmet comfort food,” a fusion of Asian, Italian, Southern and Mexican made with locally sourced ingredients (hormonefree, free range) and seasonal produce. Dinner entrées $16-$35. Open M-Sa for d, Sa br 10 am-1 pm. www.clevelandheath.com. 106 N. Main St., 618.307.4830. Map 1-2H THE CUP— Desserts/Sweets. See listing under

“Central West End.” Open M-Th 10:30 am-6:30 pm, F & Sa 9:30 am-9 pm. www.cravethecup.com. 1057 Century Dr., Edwardsville, 618.656.2287. Map 1-2G

Laclede’s Landing BIG DADDY’S— American. Pub grub favorites like

burgers, mini tacos and potato skins, plus specials including a turkey dip, “hoosier daddy” sandwich (BBQ beef/coleslaw) and grilled shrimp skewers, all served in a party atmosphere with DJs, live music, drink specials, contests and more. Open seven days. www.bigdaddystl.com. 118 Morgan St., 314.621.6700. MetroLink-Laclede’s Landing Map 2-1G

Lafayette Square SQWIRES— American. An airy conversion of a former

wire factory building into a lovely bar/restaurant. Enjoy bouillabaisse, pork ragu, chicken pot pie, daily risotto special and extensive wine list. Open for L 32 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

1000 Washington Ave. St. Louis, MO


DINING

Tu-F, D Tu-Sa, plus weekend brunch. www.sqwires. com. 1415 S. 18th St., 314.865.3522. Map 4-4H

Maplewood ACERO— Italian. Northern Italian cuisine like

Tuscan anchovies and red wine-braised oxtail, plus popular daily ragu on polenta; all Italian wine list. Patio dining. Dinner entrées $13-$35. D (M-Sa). www.fialafood.com. 7266 Manchester Rd., 314.644.1790. Map 4-4B SCHLAFLY BOTTLEWORKS— Microbrewery. As St.

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Louis’s first new production brewery to open since the end of Prohibition, it offers tours, a restaurant, a brewery, and live music W-Su. Entrees focus on local foods and include baked mac and cheese, smoked pork steak, grilled rainbow trout, and a pretzel-encrusted chicken. Brunch, L and D (daily). www.schlafly.com/bottleworks. 7260 Southwest Ave, 314.241.2337. Map 4-4B

Mid-County KATIE’S PIZZA & PASTA OSTERIA— Italian/Pizza.

Updated regional Italian cuisine is expressed in award-winning pizzas, salads, imaginative small plates and pastas like squid ink spaghetti with prawns, scallops, clams and caviar in a pleasantly informal atmosphere with a popular patio. Pizzas and pastas $15-$21. Open for L & D daily, brunch Sa-Su. www.katiespizzaandpasta.com. 9568 Manchester Rd., 314.942.6555. Map 1-5E TRUFFLES— American. A frequently changing menu

of upscale modern American dishes, with nods to the chef’s time in Southern kitchens, includes offerings like Dover sole, barbecue ribs and more, alongside housemade cheeses and salumi. For dessert, you can’t go wrong with bananas Foster. Killer wine list. Dinner entrées $15-$49. L (Tu-F), D (Tu-Sa). www.todayattruffles.com. 9202 Clayton Rd., 314.567.9100. Map 1-4E

Midtown MIDTOWN SUSHI & RAMEN—Sushi. Civilized

industrial space serves up Japanese specialties like pork gyoza, agedashi tofu, shrimp tempura, BBQ eel and chicken teriyaki, plus ramen and sushi. Dinner entrees $10.95-$14. Open T-Su for L & D. www.midtown-sushi.com. 3674 Forest Park Ave., 314.328.2452. Map 4-3G PAPPY’S SMOKEHOUSE— Barbeque. Voted one of

the “101 Best Places to Chow Down in America” by the Travel Channel, this smokehouse specializes in dry-rubbed, slow-smoked ribs over apple and cherry woods. L (daily), D (M-Sa). www. pappyssmokehouse.com. 3106 Olive Street, 314.535.4340. Map 4-2G SOUTHERN—Southern. In one of the tastiest build-

ings in St. Louis, Southern turns out fast-casual Nashville-style fried chicken in a range of heat, plus sandwiches and Southern sides like gumbo, fried green tomatoes and sorgum-baked black-eyed peas, right next door to uber-popular Pappy’s Smokehouse. Open S, W-Th 11 am-4 pm, F-Sa 11 am-7 pm. www.stlsouthern.com. 3810 Olive St., 314.531.4668. Map 4-2G

Soulard BOGART’S SMOKEHOUSE— Barbeque. A popular

spot for ribs, pastrami, deviled-egg potato salad and more, and at the top of many “best in town” w w w.wh e re t rave le r. com 33


THE GUIDE

lists! L (M-Sa). www.bogartssmokehouse.com. 1627 S. 9th St., 314.621.3107. Map 4-4I JOANIE’S PIZZERIA— Pizza. Top-notch pizza served

in one of Soulard’s many historic buildings, a real neighborhood gathering spot. Pasta, calzones, and other plate lunch specials are on the menu. Open for L & D daily. www.joanies.com. 2101 Menard at Russell, 314.865.1994. Map 4-4H; Carry-out only: 804 Russell Blvd., 314.865.5800. Map 4-4H

#stayfried

SOULARD COFFEE GARDEN CAFE— Coffee/Tea Bar.

Soulard’s popular coffeehouse also serves a fantastic breakfast and grilled sandwiches, quesadillas, soups, and salads. Open for B & L daily, till 3 pm M-F and 4 pm Sa & Su. www.soulardcoffeegarden. com. 910 Geyer Ave., between 9th & 10th Sts., 314.241.1464. Map 4-4H THE SWEET DIVINE— Desserts/Sweets. Boutique

bakery and coffee bar dishes up baked-fromscratch cupcakes, donuts, pies, cinnamon rolls, cookies, and more—plus ice cream, wine, beer and boozy coffees—in an irresistibly cute shop near the Soulard Farmers Market. Open Tu-Th 6:30 am-9 pm, F-Sa 6:30 am-10 pm, Su 10 am-4 pm. www.thesweetdivine.com. 1801 S. 9th St., 314.669.9339. Map 4-4H

South Grand Area

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HAUNTED TOURS • GHOST STORIES TRIVIA • GHOST HUNTING • POE 2018 HALLOWEEN BASH Check our website for details.

314-664-8024 3322 DEMENIL PLACE ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI

Voted Best Fried Chicken 2017 & 2018!

THE KING & I— Thai. The granddaddy of local Thai

places, where the experience starts with cocktails (like Siam Stinker and Fog Cutter). Large menu befits a large restaurant. Try the pad Thai, any of several excellent curries, panang tofu and much more. Dinner prices $6.95-$12.95. Lunch and dinner daily except M. (Cards: AE DS MC V) www.kingandistl. com. 3157 S. Grand, 314.771.1777. Map 4-5F

314.531.4668 stlsouthern.com

LempMansion.com

THE VINE MEDITERRANEAN CAFÉ AND MARKET— Lebanese-Mediterranean. Indulge in the

uber-healthy Mediterranean diet served with traditional Arabic hospitality in this popular Lebanese restaurant in the South Grand neighborhood. The menu features classics like hummus, tabouli, baba ganough, falafel, kabobs and shawarma, plus grilled fish, halal meats and vegetarian options. L and D daily. thevinestl.com/thevinecafe/Home. html. 3171 S. Grand Blvd., 314.776.0991. Map 4-5F

South St. Louis AYA SOFIA— Mediterranean. Sumptuously deco-

rated and intimate, this is an oasis for authentic Turkish/Mediterranean food including seafood, beef and lamb dishes, plus, ample vegetarian options and tasty small plates. Full-service bar. L (Tu-F), D (Tu-Su), brunch (Su). www.ayasofiacuisine. com. 6671 Chippewa, 314.645.9919. Map 4-5C FARMHAUS— American. Fresh, seasonal ingredients

from local farms and organic food production by James Beard Award Nominee Kevin Willman. The menu changes daily. Dinner entrees $12-$35. Lunch M-Th 11 am-2 pm. Dinner T-Sa 5:30 pm-close; reservations recommended. www. farmhausrestaurant.com. 3257 Ivanhoe Ave, 314.647.3800. Map 4-5C

“Best Destination for BBQ in St. Louis” and “Voted #1 for Best Ribs”

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34 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

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Open 7 days a week

SISTER CITIES CAJUN & BARBECUE— Cajun/Creole.

Get your gumbo on, with the savory and spiced dishes from the dirty chick (smoked chicken on a bed of dirty rice, smothered in seafood gumbo) and spicy shrimp tacos to plump crawfish and crab cakes; some tasty cocktails, too. Open for L & D TuSu. 3550 S. Broadway, 314.404.0477. Map 4-5H

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Eclectic combination of Italian and traditional Spanish cuisines.

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5046 Shaw Ave.

314-771-4900 www.guidosstl.com


DINING

St. Charles/O’Fallon Area GINGHAM’S HOMESTYLE RESTAURANT— Homestyle Café. Down-home classics, from scratch, served 24

Stunning panoramic views of downtown St. Louis and the Gateway Arch

hours a day: that’s a recipe for success. Countryfried steak & eggs, pancakes/waffles/French toast, vegetable soup, Monte Cristo sandwiches, burgers, fried chicken and much more. Open 24 hours daily. ginghamsrestaurant.com/. 1881 Sherman Dr., 636.946.0266. Map 1-3D STONE SOUP COTTAGE— French. Highly acclaimed

restaurant by a world-traveling, cruise-ship chef in a sophisticated yet rustic setting that is one of the toughest reservations in town. Produce for the classic French cuisine comes from the on-site farm, the technique straight from Escoffier. Multi-course dinner $90, wine flight pairings $55. Open for D (Th-Sa) by reservation only. www.stonesoupcottage.com. 5809 Highway N, 636.244.2233. Map 1-3C

The Hill Area ANTHONINO’S TAVERNA— Eclectic. Greek? Italian?

Yes! From renowned specialty pizzas (the gyro and buffalo chicken are favorites) to chicken Marsala and tasty stuffed grape leaves, your taste buds will enjoy the culture clash. L and D (M-Sa). www.anthoninos.com. 2225 Macklind Ave., 314.773.4455. Map 4-4D CHARLIE GITTO’S— Italian. “Wine Spectator” Award

of Excellence. A venerable room with longstanding St. Louis ties make this pasta house a favorite for dishes including veal Milanese, chicken spiedini, baked spaghetti and three-pepper seafood pasta. Great wine list. D (daily). www.charliegittos.com. 5226 Shaw Ave., 314.772.8898. Map 4-4E DOMINIC’S— Italian. Holds a DiRoNA; recent

inductee to the National Restaurant Fine Dining Hall of Fame. Specializes in Italian cuisine, including fresh seafood, veal fontina and Lobster alla Gusta. Entrées $17.50-$30. Valet parking; jackets preferred. Open for dinner M-Sa. (Cards: AE DC DS MC V CB) www.dominicsrestaurants.com. 5101 Wilson at Hereford, 314.771.1632. Map 4-4E GUIDO’S PIZZERIA & TAPAS— Spanish. Spain and

Italy share a border on the homey menu, which features 10-15 tapas daily (like croquetas de pollo and bacalao a la Vizcaina, a cod dish), alongside popular dishes like cannelloni, lasagna and St. Louis-style thin-crust pizza. Wash it all down with a refreshing, house-made sangria. Open for lunch and dinner daily. www.guidosstl.com. 5046 Shaw Ave., 314.771.4900. Map 4-4E MAMA’S ON THE HILL— Italian. Longtime neighbor-

hood staple serves up familiar favorites like toasted ravioli, flash-fried spinach and pizza alongside entrées including veal Marsala, jumbo prawns scampi and seafood ravioli. Dinner entrées $9.95-$22.95. Open for lunch and dinner daily. www.mamasonthehill.com. 2132 Edwards, 314.776.3100. Map 4-4E

The Loop Area PUBLICO—American, Mexican/Latin. Wood-fired

cantina restaurant by the owner of Randolfi’s and Half & Half raises Mexican cooking to a new level with its oak-burning hearth for split-roasted and grilled meats, vegetables and seafood. Arepas and tacos $10-$14; shareable fish, chops and steak $21$28. Open for D (Tu-Su). www.publicostl.com. 6679 Delmar Blvd., 314.833.5780. Map 4-1C w w w.wh e re t rave le r. com 35


THE GUIDE

DINING

AWARD-WINNING BAKERY

Webster Groves

by James Beard Award-nominated Jesse Mendica hits all the highlights: oysters, beef tartare, salmon, steaks, chicken, beef tenderloin, rack of lamb, Dover sole—each one given its own special twist. Dinner entrées $18-$36. Reservations recommended. Open for D (daily). www.oliveandoakstl.com. 102 W. Lockwood Ave., 314.736.1370. Map 1-5E

West County DALIE’S SMOKEHOUSE—. The full complement

of barbecue options includes ribs, pulled pork, pulled chicken, beef brisket, turkey and ham, plus salads, sides and sauces. Open for L & D (Tu-Sa), Su 11 am-4 pm. www.daliessmokehouse.com. 2951 Dougherty Ferry Rd., 636.529.1898. Map 1-5E ROSALITA’S CANTINA— Mexican & Tex-Mex. See list-

ing under Downtown. www.rosalitascantina.com. 12796 Manchester Rd., 314.441.7060. Map 1-5E THE TAVERN— American. Casual yet upscale spot

has fun with its food, from the Angry Bastards (blackened shrimp in Arrogant Bastard beer and jalapeno butter) to the Filet Loco Moco, served with Madeira mushrooms and a fried egg. Fish, fowl and inventive sides, too. The Sunday “Fixe” includes an appetizer/salad, an entree, and dessert for $35 every Sunday night. Reservations suggested. Open for D nightly. www.tavernstl.com. 2961 Dougherty Ferry Rd, 314.825.0600. Map 1-5E

West Port Plaza DRUNKEN FISH— Japanese/Sushi. Ultra-contempo-

rary atmosphere—and a weekend DJ spin—draw the beautiful people to this sushi haven (also offering plenty of non-sushi choices, like tempura and teriyaki). Open M-F for L&D, D only Sa/Su. www. drunkenfish.com. 639 Westport, I-270 & Page Blvd., 314.275.8300. Map 1-4E PAUL MINEO’S TRATTORIA— Italian. You’ll never

leave hungry from a meal at this authentic Sicilian eatery: from mama’s lasagna to risotto, lunch and dinner entrées come in generous portions, but we recommend saving room for dessert, like fresh housemade cannoli. Occasional live music. L (M-F), D (M-Sa). www.paulmineos.com. 333 West Port Plaza, 314.878.8180. Map 1-4E WESTPORT SOCIAL—Sports Bar. The spacious

sports bar in Westport Plaza delivers lots of sports on giant screens and lets patrons get in the act with ping-pong, basketball, shuffleboard, darts, snookball, karaoke and bocce ball (yes, the real thing, not VR). Menu includes appetizers, salads, pizzas, sliders, ribs, tacos and more.Fun, fun, fun. Pizzas/sliders/plates $9-$12. Open daily for L & D, until 1 am M-Sa, until 12:30 am Su. www.westportsocial-stl. com. 910 Westport Plaza, 314.548.2876. Map 1-4E 36 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

9 INCH CAKES

OLIVE + OAK—American. The classic American menu

DOUBLE DECKER

pre- or post-theater spot, a can’t-miss date night, even a winner for taking mom to lunch: the café menu (tilapia, pork tenderloin, shrimp Creole, chicken Marsala, sandwiches, etc.) is but prelude to the real stars of the show: legendary desserts like cherries jubilee, the Cleopatra (ice cream decadence), caramel brioche bread pudding and so much more. Extensive coffee and cocktail menus, too. Open for L & D daily. www.cyranos.com. 603 E. Lockwood, 314.963.3232. Map 4-5A

MUMMY CUPCAKE

CYRANO’S CAFÉ & WINE BAR— Eclectic. The perfect

CENTRAL WEST END

EDWARDSVILLE

28 MARYLAND PLAZA REAR ST. LOUIS, MO 63108

1057 CENTURY DRIVE EDWARDSVILLE, IL 62025

BUY 1 GET 1 Free standard cupcake with a cupcake purchase. Walk-in orders only. One per customer. Exp. 11.1.18 CODE: W1018

CRAVETHECUP.COM


S SP PE EC CI AI AL LA ADDV VE ER RT TI SI SI NI NGGS SE EC CT TI OI ONN

SFCITY DINING TASTE OF THE Charlie Gitto’s® S Wires

Charlie Gitto’s®

Located in the Italian neighborhood known as the Hill, Just one mile south of downtown in the historic Lafayette Square Charlie Gitto’s® features an old neighborhood is SqWires, a handsome redesign a 19th-century world charm. The of broad menu perfect wine fromcomplex. the WineSqWires brick structure, part of a Victorian-era factory of Excellence seasonal menu features fresh Spectator interpretations of classicwinning American list. Charlie Gitto’s® inside Harrah’s cuisine, offering a wide variety of lunch & dinner entrees, desserts St. Louis offers a taste of the Hill in & daily specials (including vegetarian, vegan & gluten-free options!). Maryland Heights. Both locations SqWires weekend brunchare features open its forfamous dinner 7Bloody nights Mary per & Mimosa bar. With a full bar & great happy houron specials, theand choices week. Brunch Saturday at SqWires are sureSunday. to please whatever the occasion.

Located in the Italian neighborhood known as the Hill, Charlie Gitto’s® features an old world charm. The broad menu perfect wine from the Wine Spectator of Excellence winning list. Charlie Gitto’s® inside Harrah’s St. Louis offers a taste of the Hill in Maryland Heights. Both locations are open for dinner 7 nights per week. Brunch on Saturday and Sunday.

1 1 15525 SouthOlive 18th Blvd, Street 636-536-2199 314 reserva65 3522 Chesterfield,MOonline tionsatwww.charliegittos.com www.s wires.com

636-536-2199 15525 Olive Blvd, Chesterfield,MOonlinereservationsatwww.charliegittos.com

Pickles Deli Chophouse Dakota

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“Voted Best Deli 8 Years In A Row By Dakota combines the history and architecture The RFT &Chophouse Best Sandwich And Soups” of the famed Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel with inventive and thoroughly modern steakhouse dishes. Dinner Pickles “New York Style” Deli offers Fresh sliced meats, top lineentrees includeand diver scallops with truffle and beurre blanc or cheeses bakery fresh breads at twogrits convenient locations. Colorado lambNew sirloin beet risotto and tarragon Famous for their York with Pastrami, Kosher style corned beef lamb jus. Beef cuts,and such asCheese the prime mignon, brisket, Reubens Philly Steaks.bone–in–filet Plus soups, salads, are served with a choice of butters, including foie gras or desserts and more. roasted garlic, or sauces, including black-truffle cream or lemon beurre blanc. Guests can dine al fresco amid the Hollywood scene, and to the bridge, an exclusive seating area that overlooks the Tropicana Bar and sparkling David Hockney–painted pool. Live entertainment on Friday nights. Dinner nightly; jazz brunch Sun.

314-361-DELI 22 North Euclid (Central West End), St. Louis, MO 63108, 7000 Hollywood Blvd., 314-241-2255 200 North Broadway, (Downtown), St. Louis,Hollywood MO 63101 www.picklesdelistl.com 323.769.8888 dakotarestaurant.com

The Restaurant Open 24/7 and conveniently located within blocks of entertainment destinations, The Restaurant at The Standard Downtown LA is a perfect pre- or post-performance dining venue. The interior portion of the restaurant offers a throwback to 1950s glamour, with outdoor seating available on the terrace. Specialties include the Eggsadilla; Homemade Spaghetti Pepperoncino; Chicken ‘n’ Waffles; and the 3 Lil’ Pigs Berkshire Pork chop. The Restaurant is also known for its fruit-infused cocktails and perfect wine pairings. Reservations recommended. All meals daily; brunch Sat.-Sun.

TheStandard,DowntownLA,550S.FlowerStreet,downtown 213.439.3030 standardhotels.com w w w.wh e re t rave le r.c o m I M O N T H YwEw AR w.wh I WeHre ER t rave E C Ile TY r. com N A M37 E 37


THE GUIDE MAP 4 CENTRAL CORRIDOR

D

E

THE LOOP

Moonrise Hotel

Univ. City Big Bend The Ritz-Carlton

Clayton Plaza Hotel

170 Homewood Suites

Saint Louis Galleria

Tivoli Theatre

Regional Arts Delmar Loop Commission Theatre at St. John’s

Forest Park

Skinker

Forsyth

Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum

CENTRAL WEST END

Clayton

CLAYTON

Forest Park Trolley

Holiday In

Barnes-Je Childre Wash. U. M

CLAYTON ROW The Boulevard

DEMUN

Richmond Heights

Central West End

Forest Park Trolley

64

RICHMOND HEIGHTS

64 DOGTOWN

Drury Inn & Suites

Mildred E. Bastian Performing Arts Center

Brentwood I-64

T

BRENTWOOD

44

MAPLEWOOD

Maplewood Manchester

Drury Inn & Suites Forest Park

CLIFTON HEIGHTS

THE HILL Luminary Center for the Arts

Sunnen

LINDENWOOD PARK

WEBSTER GROVES OLD ORCHARD

SOUTHWEST GARDEN

KEY Shrewsbury/ Lansdowne/I-44

44

38 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

ST. LOUIS HILLS

66

Interstate

Shopping

90

U.S. Highway

Hotel

7

State Highway

Place of Interest

Golf Course

University/ College Museum/Gallery

MetroLink Rail

Theater/Arts Venue

J C W H


MAPS

I

J

VENICE

Griot Museum of Black History

70 GRAND CENTER ARTS DISTRICT

Gaslight Theatre

nn Express

ewish Hospital en's Hospital Medical Center

Kranzberg Arts Center Craft Alliance Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis Pulitzer Arts Foundation

Moto Museum SLU MIDTOWN

70

MIDTOWN ALLEY

Hotel Ignacio

DOWNTOWN

International Photography Hall of Fame & Museum

Chaifetz Arena

Pear Tree Inn by Drury

Grand

64

THE GROVE

8th & Pine

Union Station Civic Center

LAFAYETTE SQUARE

SHAW

HARTFORD ST . JUNIATA ST. CONNECTICUT ST. WYOMING . HUMPHREYST ST.

COMPTON HEIGHTS

44

Conv. CTR

Laclede’s Landing

East Riverfront

EAST ST. LOUIS

Busch Stadium

44

Lumiere Place Casino

55 64

55 Soulard Market

SOULARD

55 SOUTH GRAND BENTON PARK

1/2 mi 1000 m

I

SAUGET

J

w w w.wh e re t rave le r. com 39


THE GUIDE MAP 1 METRO AREA

MAP

4

METRO AREA

100

267

47

67

61

159

94 79

140

Argosy Casino

94

94

367 143

3 94

70

157

111

70

255

Confluence Tower

67

70

370

Cedar Lake Cellars

Ameristar Casino & Hotel

64 61

364

40

143 157

Airport Main Terminal

94

159

270 St. Louis Lambert International Airport

55

270

367

70

162

94

47

Chandler Hill Vineyards Noboleis Vineyards & Winery

94

Yellow Farmhouse Winery

Taubman Prestige Outlets Saint Louis Premium Outlets

364

180

170

40

203

55

67

64

340

70

340

Forest Park

270 100

94

Mount Pleasant Estates

55

141

100

64 161

3

15

109

66 90

U.S. Highway

Hotel

7

State Highway

Place of Interest

Golf Course

University/ College 50 Vineyard

Shiloh/Scott

Swansea

255

Shopping

Memorial Hospital

158

13

100

KEY

MetroLink Rail

64 Fairview Heights

109

47

Interstate

159

255

JJK Washington Park

Shrewsbury

44

157

Emerson Park East Riverfront5th & Missouri

100

70

College

Belleville

158

44

163

177

158

159 141

30

13

3

21

15

55

Museum/ Gallery

10 mi 10 km

to Ste. Genevieve at exit 150

44

MAP 2 DOWNTOWN A

B

C

D

E

F LUMIÈRE PLACE

G

Four Season Hotel

Holiday Inn Convention Center

HoteLumière

Embassy Suites Hotel

Courtyard St. Louis

MORGANLACLEDE’S

LANDING

LUCAS AVE Hampton Inn

Laclede’s Landing

Convention

Marriott Grand Hotel

Center Economy MERCANTILEMuseum EXCHANGE Old Post Office Plaza

2

Magnolia Hotel

Hilton Hotel City Place St. Louis Hyatt Regency St. Louis at The Arch

St. Louis 8th & Majestic Hotel Pine

3 Gateway Mall

St. Louis Union Station

St. Louis Union Station Hotel

Drury Inn Union Station

Kiener Plaza

City Garden

Stifel Theater Enterprise Center

4

Civic Center

Union Station

East Riverfront Casino Queen Hotel & Casino

RIVERFRONT Gateway Helicopter Tours

Ballpark Village

4

Westin St. Louis

Busch Stadium

44

5

Field House Museum

40 W H E R E S T. LO U I S I O C TO B E R 2018

B

C

3

Drury Plaza

5 A

2

Hilton St. Louis

St. Louis City Center Hotel

64

1

LACLEDES LANDING BLVD

National Drury Inn Blues Convention Center Museum

LEONOR K SULLIVAN BLVD

1

D

E

F

G


START HERE!

NEW LOCATION | 8TH & PINE Come visit the MetroStore at its new location at the corner of 8th and Pine in downtown St. Louis. The MetroStore is the exclusive, retail outlet of St. Louis Metro Transit that visitors from around the region have relied on for years for maps, schedules, transit information and to purchase passes. The new MetroStore location features the same friendly faces and services you have come to expect but also includes an improved store design, new St. Louis themed souvenirs and an enhanced multi-modal transportation offering to help get you where you want to go.

MetroStore.org

Questions? Call one of our friendly MetroStore staff at 314.982.1495.



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