Forest Park | |
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The World's Fair Pavilion in Forest Park
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Map of Forest Park | |
Type | Urban park |
Location | St. Louis, Missouri, United States |
Coordinates | 38°38′20″N 90°17′05″W / 38.6389°N 90.2846°WCoordinates: 38°38′20″N 90°17′05″W / 38.6389°N 90.2846°W |
Area | 1,371 acres (5,550,000 m2) |
Created | June 24, 1876 |
Operated by | St. Louis Parks Department |
Visitors | 12 million |
Status | Open all year (6 a.m. to 10 p.m.) |
Website | stlouis-mo.gov |
Forest Park is a public park located in the western portion of the city of St. Louis, Missouri, United States. It is a prominent civic center and covers 1,371 acres (5.55 km2). Opened in 1876, more than a decade after its proposal, the park has hosted several significant events, including the Louisiana Purchase Exposition of 1904 and the 1904 Summer Olympics. Bounded by Skinker Boulevard, Lindell Boulevard, Kingshighway Boulevard, and Oakland Avenue, it is known as the "Heart of St. Louis" and features a variety of attractions, including the St. Louis Zoo, the Saint Louis Art Museum, the Missouri History Museum, and the St. Louis Science Center.
Since the early-2000s, it has carried out a $100 million restoration of its facilities through a public-private partnership aided by its Master Plan. Changes have extended to improving landscaping and habitat as well. The park's acreage includes meadows and trees and a variety of ponds, manmade lakes, and freshwater streams. For several years, the park has been restoring prairie and wetlands areas of the park. It has reduced flooding and attracted a much greater variety of birds and wildlife, which have settled in the new natural habitats.
An 1864 plan for a large park in the city limits was rejected by St. Louis voters. In 1872, St. Louis developer Hiram Leffingwell proposed a 1,000-acre (4.0 km2) park about three miles (5 km) outside the city limits near land which he owned. After a period of intense lobbying by Leffingwell, the Missouri General Assembly authorized the city to purchase the land; however, city taxpayers challenged the purchase in court, and in 1873, the Missouri Supreme Court overturned the authorization. The next year another developer, Andrew McKinley, prepared another proposal that met legal challenges. The tract selected that became Forest Park included a heavily forested 1,375-acre (5.56 km2) area west of Kingshighway along Olive Street (now Lindell Boulevard).