The recently renovated historic Kirkwood Train Station serves as both a transportation hub and a community gathering place. In our sustainability series, What Do I Do with This?, we tackle the stacks of media piled up in our homes, and I Am St. Louis returns to the early 1900s to solve tap water problems.
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Kirkwood Train Station Remodel
Since 1893, the historic Kirkwood Train Station has served as both a transportation hub and community gathering place, and its recent renovation preserves its character while improving accessibility, safety, and comfort for the future.
What Do I Do with This? Disc Junkies
From the popular resurgence of physical media at the Record Exchange to the environmental impact of streaming, how to digitize your memories at the St. Louis County Library, and some crafty alternatives to recycling at Leftover, Etc., this episode tackles the stacks of media we all probably have piling up around our homes.
I Am St. Louis: Water Quality
St. Louis’ tap water has a great reputation for cleanliness and taste, but prior to the early 1900s, it was more mud than water, a problem one St. Louisan became quite famous for solving.
Support for Living St. Louis is provided in part by the Betsy & Thomas O. Patterson Foundation, and with a generous gift from Mrs. and Mr. Theodore P. Desloge Trust, made in memory of Mrs. and Mr. Theodore P. Desloge, Jr.
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