Landmarks Locations Throughout the Years
Stuart Keating presents research done by Landmarks volunteer Marci Snow-Perry into all the different locations where Landmarks Association has been located since its start in 1959.
Stuart Keating presents research done by Landmarks volunteer Marci Snow-Perry into all the different locations where Landmarks Association has been located since its start in 1959.
On April 26th, 2016, Kelly Moffitt from St. Louis on the Air interviewed former Landmarks executive director Andrew Weil regarding our “Most Endangered” list we released earlier that year.
Exec. Director Stuart Keating unpacks the 1969 Heritage/St. Louis project, and sits down with board member and former Heritage/St. Louis volunteer Bill Seibert for an interview on the project’s scope and impact.
Nick Sacco, historian and curator, will share an exploration of pre-Civil War St. Louis through the daguerreotype photographs of Thomas Easterly that are housed at the Missouri Historical Society. No other photographer in St. Louis captured the city’s built landscape of the 1840s and 1850s quite like Easterly.
Amanda Clark, public historian with the Missouri Historical Society, will trace the cycles of reinvention that have defined Laclede’s Landing by diving into how the neighborhood’s fortunes have shifted over time as well as how its story mirrors the evolving challenges of historic preservation today.
On March 30th, 2023, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch released a a YouTube video showcasing the recently completed rehabilitation of the new Landmarks headquarters.
On March 28, 2022, St. Louis Public Radio published a piece covering the Preservation Board’s decision to provide preliminary approval to the St. Louis Symphony for their plan to renovate and expand Powell Hall.
Living in Saint Louis in 2026, we are faced with the unenviable task of trying to right a century of
On March 11th, 2015, St. Louis on the Air spoke with former executive director Andrew Weil regarding how the proposed plan for a new NFL stadium on the northeast side involved demolishing two dozen historic buildings.
On March 1st, 2013, Kristen Hare from the St. Louis Beacon reported on the continuing demolition of the Pevely Dairy complex at Grand and Chouteau.