19 St. Louis Places That Are Way More Beautiful Than You'd Expect

This entire city is absolutely filled with all kinds of amazing architecture. As you may have noticed by our lovely Gateway Arch, we're kind of good at design here. From our red-brick rowhouses to our amazing pockets of mid-century modern neighborhoods, in St. Louis you are never without a treat for the eyes. But this eye candy often extends into places that you wouldn't expect -- including government buildings, fire stations and even funeral homes. Here, we take you on a tour of all of the unexpectedly beautiful spots around town that you might've missed.

This entire city is absolutely filled with all kinds of amazing architecture. As you may have noticed by our lovely Gateway Arch, we're kind of good at design here. From our red-brick rowhouses to our amazing pockets of mid-century modern neighborhoods, in St. Louis you are never without a treat for the eyes. But this eye candy often extends into places that you wouldn't expect -- including government buildings, fire stations and even funeral homes. Here, we take you on a tour of all of the unexpectedly beautiful spots around town that you might've missed.

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"Downtown St. Louis used to look so terrible, it stood in for post-apocalyptic New York in Escape from New York."
Union Station, 1820 Market St.
"This is an old train station where they shot a shitload of scenes for Escape from New York. Look how far we've come!"
Photo courtesy of Pete / Flickr

"Downtown St. Louis used to look so terrible, it stood in for post-apocalyptic New York in Escape from New York."


Union Station, 1820 Market St.
"This is an old train station where they shot a shitload of scenes for Escape from New York. Look how far we've come!"

Photo courtesy of Pete / Flickr
Chain of Rocks Bridge
10950 Riverview Dr.
The name might make you think that this bridge is going to be just a natural site -- like a beaver dam that you have to walk across rocks to get to the other side. But the Chain of Rocks Bridge is a real structure that spans the Mississippi River. Walking out above the middle of the river and taking in the gorgeous views is a treat for both locals and tourists. This picture shows one of our favorite angles, a peek over the edge of the bridge at the intake towers (structures that pump water to a treatment plant) that were designed look like they have mini mansions built on top of them.
Photo courtesy of Nagel Photography / Shutterstock

Chain of Rocks Bridge


10950 Riverview Dr.
The name might make you think that this bridge is going to be just a natural site -- like a beaver dam that you have to walk across rocks to get to the other side. But the Chain of Rocks Bridge is a real structure that spans the Mississippi River. Walking out above the middle of the river and taking in the gorgeous views is a treat for both locals and tourists. This picture shows one of our favorite angles, a peek over the edge of the bridge at the intake towers (structures that pump water to a treatment plant) that were designed look like they have mini mansions built on top of them.

Photo courtesy of Nagel Photography / Shutterstock
Central Library
1301 Olive St.
Libraries are usually thought of as purely functional spaces. Generally, they're just a place that houses dusty old books and a few behind-the-times computers. But the St. Louis Public Library excels in a few areas and design is at the forefront. While many of the branches are aesthetically pleasing, none of them compare to the Central Library downtown. Holy heck. It's dazzling from top to bottom.
Photo courtesy of Nagel Photography / Shutterstock

Central Library


1301 Olive St.
Libraries are usually thought of as purely functional spaces. Generally, they're just a place that houses dusty old books and a few behind-the-times computers. But the St. Louis Public Library excels in a few areas and design is at the forefront. While many of the branches are aesthetically pleasing, none of them compare to the Central Library downtown. Holy heck. It's dazzling from top to bottom.

Photo courtesy of Nagel Photography / Shutterstock
Weldon Springs Interpretive Center
7295 MO-94, St. Charles, MO
Known as the "Nuclear Waste Adventure Trail," this site in Weldon Springs is the home of a former uranium processing plant. The toxic materials have since been covered by 75 feet of earth and you can visit it all. Poke through the Interpretive Center to learn all about the history of the area, and then go hike up to the top of the toxic mound (the "Weldon Spring Disposal Cell") for a panoramic view of St. Charles county. It's stunning. And hey, you might glow in the dark after your trip!
Photo courtesy of Ken seghers / Flickr

Weldon Springs Interpretive Center


7295 MO-94, St. Charles, MO
Known as the "Nuclear Waste Adventure Trail," this site in Weldon Springs is the home of a former uranium processing plant. The toxic materials have since been covered by 75 feet of earth and you can visit it all. Poke through the Interpretive Center to learn all about the history of the area, and then go hike up to the top of the toxic mound (the "Weldon Spring Disposal Cell") for a panoramic view of St. Charles county. It's stunning. And hey, you might glow in the dark after your trip!

Photo courtesy of Ken seghers / Flickr
Union Station
1820 Market St.
For a train station, this is some pretty fancy stuff. St. Louis has always been a port city and a hub of transportation and Union Station was the crown jewel. It was once the largest and busiest train station in the world and its grandness lives on. If you were visiting for the first time and just expecting to just see a hollow hall converted into an indoor mall, you'd be totally shocked by the beauty within.
Photo courtesy of Pete / Flickr

Union Station


1820 Market St.
For a train station, this is some pretty fancy stuff. St. Louis has always been a port city and a hub of transportation and Union Station was the crown jewel. It was once the largest and busiest train station in the world and its grandness lives on. If you were visiting for the first time and just expecting to just see a hollow hall converted into an indoor mall, you'd be totally shocked by the beauty within.

Photo courtesy of Pete / Flickr
City Hall
1200 Market St.
Paying your personal property tax must be one of the lamest things we do as Americans, but in St. Louis it doesn't have to be an ugly situation. Our City Hall is hauntingly beautiful. Built in the 1890's, the French-style building has ornate towers and ornamental dormer windows on the outside and the inside is equally impressive, with high ceilings and open spaces that create an elegant echo.
Photo courtesy of City of St. Louis / Flickr

City Hall


1200 Market St.
Paying your personal property tax must be one of the lamest things we do as Americans, but in St. Louis it doesn't have to be an ugly situation. Our City Hall is hauntingly beautiful. Built in the 1890's, the French-style building has ornate towers and ornamental dormer windows on the outside and the inside is equally impressive, with high ceilings and open spaces that create an elegant echo.

Photo courtesy of City of St. Louis / Flickr
St. Louis Fire Department Engine House No. 7
2600 Lasalle St.
St. Louis has no shortage of stunning mid-century modern buildings, so sometimes it's easy to overlook some of the amazing designs that we see every day while just driving around town, like this beautifully preserved fire house along Jefferson near Chouteau.
Photo courtesy of Jaime Lees

St. Louis Fire Department Engine House No. 7


2600 Lasalle St.
St. Louis has no shortage of stunning mid-century modern buildings, so sometimes it's easy to overlook some of the amazing designs that we see every day while just driving around town, like this beautifully preserved fire house along Jefferson near Chouteau.
Photo courtesy of Jaime Lees
Coldwater Creek
Florissant, MO
This awful creek has been spreading the radioactive waste left over from the Manhattan Project all over north county for decades. It has caused so much disease and death that it's kind of shocking when you see it and it appears to just be a harmless little stream tucked under some lovely trees.
Photo courtesy of Melissa / Flickr

Coldwater Creek


Florissant, MO
This awful creek has been spreading the radioactive waste left over from the Manhattan Project all over north county for decades. It has caused so much disease and death that it's kind of shocking when you see it and it appears to just be a harmless little stream tucked under some lovely trees.

Photo courtesy of Melissa / Flickr
McLaughlin Funeral Home
2301 Lafayette Ave.
When the Lafayette Square neighborhood association held a murder mystery fundraiser earlier this year, the setting at the McLaughlin Funeral Home was definitely an attention-grabber -- but no more so than the stately mansion proved to be once party-goers were inside it. Though it was originally built as a single-family home (!) it managed to survive the great tornado of 1896 and eventually became a funeral home, which it remains today. But you should try to check out the beautiful space before you're the one being laid to rest. With elegant stained glass, elaborate chandeliers and a grand old staircase right out of Gone with the Wind, this place is way more gorgeous than the average funeral home.
Photo courtesy of Trish / Flickr

McLaughlin Funeral Home


2301 Lafayette Ave.
When the Lafayette Square neighborhood association held a murder mystery fundraiser earlier this year, the setting at the McLaughlin Funeral Home was definitely an attention-grabber -- but no more so than the stately mansion proved to be once party-goers were inside it. Though it was originally built as a single-family home (!) it managed to survive the great tornado of 1896 and eventually became a funeral home, which it remains today. But you should try to check out the beautiful space before you're the one being laid to rest. With elegant stained glass, elaborate chandeliers and a grand old staircase right out of Gone with the Wind, this place is way more gorgeous than the average funeral home.

Photo courtesy of Trish / Flickr
Cotton Belt Freight Depot
1400 N. 1st St.
This five-story railway depot was built in 1911 and has since fallen into a state of complete disrepair. But the Cotton Belt Freight Depot lives on in 2018 and beyond as one of the most prominent sites in the city for street art, as witnessed by this gorgeous mural on its east side.
Photo courtesy of henskechristine

Cotton Belt Freight Depot


1400 N. 1st St.
This five-story railway depot was built in 1911 and has since fallen into a state of complete disrepair. But the Cotton Belt Freight Depot lives on in 2018 and beyond as one of the most prominent sites in the city for street art, as witnessed by this gorgeous mural on its east side.

Photo courtesy of henskechristine