MotorCoach Blog 59

I Am a Motorcoach . . .

. . . big red love machine! Yes, you read it right: LOVE. That’s what I’ve decided I – Two Eight One – am all about. I’ve only been motoring around the streets and highways of the US for just over a year, but I’m getting this thing figured out . . . this thing being me. The love conclusion came to me gradually, hearing passengers chat about family and friends back home during hours of travel between cities and states. I first began to notice how popular the love subject is. Then I took note of its essentials: care, service, fondness, goodwill, protection, provision, support, and so on. It occurred to me that this is what I’m all about. Goodwill? Heck, I’ve got that galore! Every impulse of my digital awareness is for the good of my passengers. Service? Just one example: I kneel for my passengers to make that step onto my staircase welcoming, and stepping off easy. Protection? I’ve never met my designers, but the more familiar I become with the ins-and-outs of me there is every indication they obsessed over passenger safety. I’m increasingly certain their objective was this business of love.

Enough muse. This particular blog is not about love, it’s about St. Louis. Quilters from California, educators from Saudi Arabia, corporate transplants getting to know the city (i.e.: the Bayer buyout of Monsanto), Independence Day fireworks enthusiasts, and various other groups from all over the region, the country, and the world made use of my services to visit St. Louis throughout 2018. Of course, the gateway Arch and surrounding area is a primary attraction, where there happens to be some new stuff to report. Let’s get to it . . .

Selfies

(which by definition means I’m in them . . . though you might have to look for me)

A passenger took this of me from the top of the Gateway Arch. I was waiting for her and the others on her tour to come back down to earth. It’s not my best viewing angle, but it was nice of her to think of me while way up there. See the greenery just to the south of my position? That’s all new. No, there was no park over the top of I-70 in the past. It was completed late summer of this year. And look to the southwest of my position, immediately north of Busch Stadium. Huge new construction is doubling the size of ballpark village. In case you didn’t know, St. Louis is nuts about baseball.

This is Julia. All of St. Louis is new to her; she’s a tourist from Pennsylvania. Julia’s ride is what’s new to St. Louis. It motors people like Julia around at up to 15 miles per hour and goes by the name Lime. There’s another version called Bird. Think of them as gnats, buzzing around everywhere! Their sudden popularity has injected a busy-fun vibe to downtown. People in suits are scootering across town to meetings, coffee shops, and eateries.

This is Chief. He’s a youngster, new to an old and treasured St. Louis tradition. We met the beasty celebrity at Anheuser Busch (just five minute south of the Arch) while there for a brewery tour. He was nice enough to stop for a selfie on his way back to his stable.

This is where you get your tickets to the travel up to the top of the Gateway Arch. I used to hear a lot of moaning about the hassle actually getting to the arch from the Old Court house. Now you just walk across the street and through the park and you’re there.

Laclede’s Landing is the historic district that celebrates the original settlement established by Frenchman and St. Louis visionary, Pierre Laclede. This is where it all began. And this is where you can enjoy fine dining and entertainment in an old world urban setting. What’s new about it is the easy access by way of the newly completed park and walkways around the Gateway arch. Just get on a Bird and scooter yourself a wee bit to the north end of the park and you’re there.

The opening of the new Arch grounds also marked the reopening of Fair St. Louis, which was displaced during the years of the Gateway project’s construction. The multi-day food and culture party made July 4th its official restart day, and there were six of us down there, our passengers enjoying the airshow over the Mississippi just prior to the highly anticipated annual fireworks display.

Here Is The News!

MEETING THE NEWS on the roadways of America, first-hand, real time, real world news—going out and discovering the news . . .

COMPLETION NEWS: It took five years and $380-million to complete renovations of the museum and grounds at the base of Eero Saarinen’s Gateway monument. The walking paths and open grass fields of the new grounds connect the Gateway Arch to the life of the city and to the Mississippi panorama beyond. And the museum below the Arch will be as new and inspiring to locals as to first-time visitors.

BILLIKEN NEWS: Mid-American Coaches is now the preferred provider for St. Louis University Billikens sports! So, now we help deliver the NCAA Division 1 and Atlantic 10 conference excellence and drama of 18 Billiken sports! Most important here: there are many bears, lions, tigers, eagles, sharks, snakes, and other land, sea, and air creatures utilizing the courts, fields, and pools of collegiate sports for competition, but make no mistake, there is only one home of the Billiken! (If you are interested in what a Billiken is, you can find it on Wikipedia.) And what a year to become a Billiken! Founded in November 1818 as the first institution of higher learning in the American West, this is St. Louis U’s 200th Anniversary!

MUST SEE...

(Unlike selfies, these are not about me, but about travel discoveries I think you’d like to know about.)

The Gateway Arch Museum: I have heard passengers say (over and over again) that when you’re there, an absolute MUST see is the award winning movie about the creation of the Gateway Arch.

Quote Of The Day samples

“You can observe a lot by just watching” – Yogi Berra

“It’s amazing how much you can learn if your intentions are truly earnest.” – Chuck Berry

(These two famous St. Louisans would have made great motorcoaches!)

(Video run time: 2 minutes 40 seconds)

Musical accompaniment:
Rag Time Time by Doug Maxwell, Media Right Productions from YouTube Audio Library

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MotorCoach Blog 20

I am a motorcoach…

. . . with long distance travelers aboard, all the way from Russia: young leaders between the ages of twenty and thirty. They set out on this journey from eighteen different cities. They’ve come from Russian cities more than 3,000 miles apart, like St. Petersburg, located on the Baltic Sea, the northernmost city of more than a million inhabitants in the world, and Chita, located in eastern Siberia along the Trans-Siberian Hwy near Mongolia. Some are lawyers, some are journalists, and some have positions in academia. They are here to learn about U.S. societal infrastructure and to study some of its working parts. The goal is to observe how various organizational contributors work together to meet the needs of citizens of this nation. Their two-week trip focuses on two cities: week one in St. Louis, Missouri, and week two in Washington, D.C.

Along their journey, the delegates hear from local leader and other select presenters representing various facets of societal organization. I will take you through a day within their journey – their final day in St. Louis.

Selfies

(which by definition means I’m in them . . . though you might have to look for me)

While in St. Louis, the delegates stayed at the Westin Hotel in south-central downtown. So, that’s where the day begins. The Westin Hotel is in one of the six remaining buildings that were part of the Cupples Station warehouse network. Originally, there were twenty large warehouses in the Cupples Station system, which had a key role in establishing and sustaining St. Louis’ prominence in the railroad industry from the early to middle 20th century. After the completion of Eads Bridge in1874 Samuel Cupples recognized the necessity for warehousing of goods being moved from river to rail systems. Cupples’ building project began in 1894 and was completed in 1917. A system of tunnels and bridges connected some of the buildings not having direct access to the rails lines, and large hydraulic freight elevators moved product vertically. One of those original elevators remains in use at the center of the Westin Hotel.
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From the Westin the delegates walked a block to the Thomas F. Eagleton U.S. Courthouse at the corner of Clark and 10 th Street. Their 8:15AM appointment was with United States District Judge Jean Hamilton. The Thomas F. Eagleton Courthouse is the largest single courthouse in the United States – 29 stories tall, 987,775 square feet.
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A few block west, a couple of other important government buildings can be seen reflected in the glass of the Scott Trade Center at 14th and Clark: The St. Louis City Hall (lower level of windows) and the State Courthouse (upper level of windows – topped with classical Roman columns). Government and judicial structure and function were of great interest to my Russian passengers.
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The group’s focus for the afternoon hours was media. For that I transported them to the home of St. Louis Public TV – the 9 Network – and Public Radio. There the delegates heard from key production facilitators in the region’s public radio and TV stations.
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Here Is The News!

MEETING THE NEWS on the roadways of America, first-hand, real time, real world news—going out and discovering the news . . .

NEWS OF FOREIGN RELATIONS: Sponsorship partners responsible for bringing the Russian delegates to St. Louis, Missouri and Washington, D.C. for their observational activities are: Supporters of Civil Society in Russia, Inc. • Association of Schools of Political Studies • Council of Europe • Open world Leadership Center • University of Missouri – St. Louis • Local Government Partnership.

NEWS OF TRANSFORMATION: Between 1950 and the 1970s Cupples Station warehouses went from vitally important to vacant and in danger of demolition. Some were razed to make room for a highway and a ballpark. Designation as national landmarks saved the six buildings that remain. Aside from the Westin Hotel, the former warehouses have been beautifully transformed into Cupples Loft Apartments.

MUST SEE...

(Unlike selfies, these are not about me, but about places you’ll want to visit.)

Each scheduled location was selected to serve some facet of the educational purpose of the delegate’s two-week visit to the U.S. That included lunch, which was served at McMurphy’s Café, part of the St. Patrick’s Center at 800 N. Tucker Blvd. St. Patrick’s Center is a non-profit organization helping individuals and families who are homeless or at risk of becoming homeless. The center helps people become financially stable by providing employment, training, and safe affordable housing. When in downtown St. Louis, you’ll want to stop by McMurphy’s Café, not just to support their excellent program, but because, according to my passengers, the food is great!
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Quote Of The Day samples

“Of the five most important things in life, health is first, education or knowledge is second, and wealth is third. I forgot the other two.” ― Chuck Berry

“I can do things you cannot, you can do things I cannot; together we can do great things.” ― Mother Teresa

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