The Great Rivers Greenway District is a public agency created in 2000 to develop a regional network of
greenways.[1] Great Rivers Greenway engages citizens and community partners to plan, build and care for the greenways.[2] In its first 20 years the agency built more than 128 miles of greenways connecting parks, rivers, schools, neighborhoods, business districts and transit.[3]
Origin
Great Rivers Greenway was established in November 2000 by the passage of Proposition C – The Clean Water, Safe Parks and Community Trails Initiative – in the
City of St. Louis,
St. Louis County and
St. Charles County,
Missouri.[4] Proposition C created a one tenth of one cent
sales tax devoted to the creation of an interconnected system of
greenways, parks and trails. The initiative was one of 11 priorities formulated by St. Louis 2004, a nonprofit organization formed in 1996 with the mission of bringing about a renaissance in the region by 2004.[1]
Governance
A twelve-member Board of Directors representing the three areas and appointed by the executive of the city or county they represent[5] governs the distribution of funds for developing the River Ring, the system of interconnected greenways, parks and trails. A Chief Executive Officer and staff carry out the development of the River Ring, working with local, county and state agencies as well as private and non-profit agencies throughout the St. Louis region.
Plans
In 2003, Great Rivers Greenway developed "Building the River Ring: A Citizen- Driven Regional Plan" to establish a long-term vision for the St. Louis region. Developed with advice from citizens, local governments, private companies, non-profit organizations and advocacy groups, the Plan identified a system of 40+
greenways comprising over 600 miles of greenways and trails throughout the three counties. Named the River Ring, the concept is designed to raise awareness of the natural beauty found in the region's many rivers and streams and to reconnect residents to the primary natural feature resulting in the City's founding, the confluence of the
Mississippi and
Missouri rivers.
The River Ring system will connect parks, trails and greenways in
St. Louis City,
St. Louis County, and
St. Charles County. Each of these greenways will follow the natural paths of rivers and streams in the area. The system will connect with trails developed by the Metro East Park and Recreation District of St. Clair and Madison Counties in Illinois. [6]
Every five years, Great Rivers Greenway engages citizens, civic leaders and partners to update the Citizen-Driven Regional Plan. Updates to the plan were published in 2011 and 2016.[7] In 2020 the agency began surveying citizens about priorities to build and care for the greenways to inform the next update to the plan.[8]
As recommended in the 2016 update to the Regional Plan, the Great Rivers Greenway Foundation was launched in 2016 to seek private funding for greenway projects.[9]
Greenways
Greenways within the district:
Boschert Greenway - The Boschert Greenway stretches from New Town in
St. Charles through Fox Hill Park to the Missouri River near Historic Downtown St. Charles and the
Katy Trail.[10] A 30 foot flower sculpture entitled “Blomstre” – the Norwegian word for Bloom – stands at the intersection of Mel Wetter Parkway and the Little Hills Expressway. The sculpture was created by artist Andrew Andrasko from old bicycle parts.[11]
Signage near a completed portion of the Brickline Greenway along Market Street in 2023
Brickline Greenway - The plan for the Brickline Greenway, formerly known as the Chouteau Greenway,[12] calls for 20 miles of trails and green space connecting 17 neighborhoods across the City of
St. Louis. It will connect
Fairground Park in the north to
Tower Grove Park in the south and
Forest Park in the west to
Gateway Arch National Park in the east.[13] The project planners aim to knit together diverse communities through the greenway to overcome barriers that have fragmented the city over time. The plan incorporates input from citizens on strategies to promote economic growth and equitable outcomes.[14]
Centennial Greenway - The Centennial Greenway will extend from
Forest Park in the City of St. Louis to St. Charles County. Three sections have been completed. From Forest Park the trail runs through the Washington University campus to Delmar Boulevard and Vernon Avenue in University City. Another section extends from
Shaw Park in Clayton north to Olive Boulevard. A third section goes from the
Katy Trail to the St. Charles Heritage Museum and connects east across the Missouri River to
Creve Coeur Lake Memorial Park via the Creve Coeur Connector Trail.[16]
Dardenne Greenway - The Dardenne Greenway follows Dardenne Creek across St. Charles County. One section loops through the BaratHaven community and a restored prairie landscape in
Dardenne Prairie. Another links Legacy Park in
Cottleville to
St. Charles Community College and Dardenne Park in
St. Peters.[17]
Deer Creek Greenway - The Deer Creek Greenway extends from Deer Creek Park in
Maplewood to Lorraine Davis Park in
Webster Groves.[18]
Gravois Greenway:
Grant's Trail - Grant's Trail on the Gravois Greenway runs along Gravois Creek on the rail corridor of the former Kirkwood-Carondelet branch of the Missouri Pacific Railroad. Trailnet, a St. Louis-based organization that advocates for active communities and safe spaces for walking and bicycling, purchased the corridor in 1991 and built the first six miles of Grant's Trail which opened in 1994.[20] Since 2006, Great Rivers Greenway has extended the trail to reach 10 miles from
Kirkwood to the River des Peres Greenway near Interstate 55 and added two miles of trail in Officer Blake C. Snyder Memorial Park, adjacent to Grant’s Trail. Points of interest on the greenway include the
Ulysses S. Grant National Historic Site,
Grant's Farm and the Thomas Sappington House Museum.[21]
Maline Greenway - The Maline Greenway connects with other paved trails in Bella Fontaine County Park in north St. Louis County. It is the first segment of a planned seven mile, east-west link that will connect the Mississippi and St. Vincent Greenways.[22]
Meramec Greenway - The Meramec River Greenway Concept Plan calls for a greenway stretching 50 river miles from the City of
Pacific to the Meramec’s confluence with the Mississippi River. Five sections have been completed. The westernmost section connects Lions Park in
Eureka to
Route 66 State Park. The next section runs along the river on the Al Foster Trail between
Glencoe and Sherman Beach County Park with a spur on the Rock Hollow Trail. A third section links Arnold’s Grove Park in
Valley Park to Simpson County Park and Greentree Park in
Kirkwood. In
Fenton the greenway connects Unger Park to Fenton City Park and George Winter Park. The fifth segment meanders through the river bottomland in Lower Meramec Park.[23]
Mississippi Greenway - The Mississippi Greenway, formerly known as the Confluence Greenway, is planned as a 32 mile corridor that will connect with the Missouri, Maline, River des Peres and Meramec Greenways. Three sections have been built. The Riverfront Trail runs from the downtown Mississippi riverfront north to the old Chain of Rocks Bridge.[24] At 5,353 feet long, the old
Chain of Rocks Bridge was part of Route 66 in 1936[25] and is one of the world’s longest bicycle and pedestrian bridges.[26] Another segment connects Jefferson Barracks County Park with River City Casino near the River des Peres Greenway. A third section runs through
Cliff Cave County Park overlooking the Mississippi River.
Missouri Greenway - The master plan for the Missouri Greenway is a 55 river mile corridor from the confluence of the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers to
Chesterfield that will connect with the Mississippi, Sunset, Centennial, Fee Fee and Western Greenways. Three sections have been built. One runs from Riverwoods Park in
Bridgeton along the Earth City Levee to the
Discovery Bridge on Missouri Route 370 where a protected pedestrian and bike path connects with the
Katy Trail.[27] In
Chesterfield, the greenway runs along the Monarch Chesterfield Levee Trail and connects to the
Katy Trail on a protected path on the
Daniel Boone Bridge. A third segment in
Hazelwood runs through Truman Park.[28]
River des Peres Greenway - The River des Peres Greenway plan calls for a 11-mile corridor from
Forest Park to the Mississippi River. Currently it runs from Francis R. Slay Park in the City of
St. Louis past the Shrewsbury/Lansdowne MetroLink station to
Carondelet Park and Lemay Park and connects to the Gravois Greenway: Grant's Trail.[29]
St. Vincent Greenway - the St. Vincent Greenway will extend seven miles from the North Hanley MetroLink station through the
University of Missouri–St. Louis (UMSL) campus to
Forest Park. Two sections have been completed. The north section runs from the North Hanley station through the UMSL campus and St. Vincent County Park. The south section connects Trojan Park through Ruth Porter Mall Park to Forest Park.[30]
Sunset Greenway - The Sunset Greenway in north St. Louis County runs from the
Old St. Ferdinand Shrine in the historic district of
Florissant through St. Ferdinand Park to Sunset Park on the Missouri River.[31]
Western Greenway - The Western Greenway runs from the Meramec Greenway at Glencoe to
Rockwoods Reservation. The master plan is to extend the greenway to connect with
Babler State Park and the Missouri Greenway in west St. Louis County.[32]
CityArchRiver Project
In 2007, four decades after completion of the
Gateway Arch, the site remained an island, severed from the rest of the city by busy highways and disconnected from the Mississippi River. Walter Metcalfe, an attorney and civic leader in St. Louis, led the formation of CityArchRiver2015 Foundation in 2009 to transform the St. Louis Riverfront and Arch grounds.[33]
Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates of New York won an international competition to redesign the Arch grounds in 2010.[34]
The project received $20 million in capital funding in 2011 from the U.S. Department of Transportation, a $25 million matching grant from the Missouri Department of Transportation and $10 million in private donations raised by CityArchRiver. With a total project cost of $380 million, more funding was needed.[35]
Great Rivers Greenway joined the effort in 2012, becoming part of a public-private partnership with the CityArchRiver2015 Foundation, National Park Service, Missouri Department of Transportation, Bi-State Development, and Jefferson National Parks Association. The partners planned a ballot issue known as Proposition P to generate sales tax revenue for the CityArchRiver project and other park improvements.[36]
In April 2013 voters in the City of St. Louis and St. Louis County approved Proposition P: The Safe and Accessible Arch and Public Parks Initiative. The proposition authorized a 3/16th-cent sales tax to fund the CityArchRiver project and accelerate local park and greenway construction. The tax was projected to generate $780 million over the next 20 years, with 60 percent going to Great Rivers Greenway and 40 percent going to support local parks in St. Louis City and County. Half of the Great Rivers Greenway revenue supported the CityArchRiver project and the other half would be used to accelerate greenway construction.[37]
Great Rivers Greenway stewarded $85 million in Proposition P funds to complete several major projects over the next five years:[38]
The Park Over the Highway, a land bridge over the I-44 and I-70 highways, connected downtown St. Louis from Luther Ely Smith Square to the Arch grounds and the riverfront, making it easy and safe for people to travel through the area on foot or by bike.[39]
Luther Ely Smith Square, a green space leading to the Park Over the Highway was renovated.[40]
The Riverfront Trail on the Mississippi Greenway was extended 1.5 miles from Biddle Street south to Chouteau Avenue along Leonor K. Sullivan Boulevard and the boulevard was raised by 2.5 feet to reduce flooding.[41]
The North Gateway, a new recreation and event space at the north entrance to the Arch grounds, opened with a natural amphitheater, a bike and pedestrian path to Laclede's Landing, shaded lawns, a children’s garden and an elevated walkway offering views of the Gateway Arch and the historic Eads Bridge.[42]
The Arch grounds were transformed with sustainable ponds, landscaping and accessible walkways connecting the Gateway Arch to the Mississippi River.[43]
Kiener Plaza was redesigned to serve as a public gathering place with a playground, fountains, an interactive splash pad, a grassy concert area, shade gardens, landscaping, and bicycle parking.[44]
Renovation of the
Old Courthouse was planned to enhance the visitor experience and accessibility. Work was scheduled to begin in late 2021.[46]
CityArchRiver Foundation changed its name to the Gateway Arch Park Foundation in 2017.[47] The Foundation raised $250 million in private funds for the project.[48]