ecology of absence

Busch Stadium


Wrecking begins on November 7, 2005. Photography by Michael R. Allen.


LOCATION: Between Spruce and Walnut, west of Broadway and east of Eighth Street; Downtown; Saint Louis, Missouri
DATES OF CONSTRUCTION: 1964-6
ARCHITECTS: Sverdrup and Parcel Associates with Edward Durrell Stone and Schwarz & Van Hoefen
DATE OF DEMOLITION: November 2005 - January 2006
CURRENT OWNER:


Wrecking Starts: November 7, 2005 ~ Halfway Gone: November 19, 2005

Nothing But Rubble: December 16, 2006


The much-publicized demolition stunt at Busch Stadium on November 7, 2005 was as uninspiring and uninteresting as the new stadium itself. At 3:00 p.m., the first swing of the wrecking ball occured. Yet it was swung from inside of the stadium, on which demolition really started ten days prior, and could not be seen from sidewalk level anywhere nearby. The only visible damage seen was the demolished mezzanine ramp, which had come down prior to yesterday (although few fans seemed to notice.) A small cheer started to rise up from the crowd long after the first swing, at about the moment when most people realized that wrecking had commenced. But it died as quickly as people started wlaking back to work.

In the old days, wreckers like Spirtas would have done something dramatic. The Cardinals cancelled an implosion when they fell ahead of schedule on completion of the new stadium, a decision that will save money and avoid spectacle. Nowadays, even the passing of a landmark like Busch Stadium is treated like a neutral even by city leaders. The suggestion the Cardinals propaganda makes is that the demolition is a non-event that will be over before we realize it is going on. They promise the noise and dust won't be too extreme, the season will start on-time at the new stadium and nothing will be out of the ordinary. The new stadium itself is almost a non-building, with its trite, neutral appearance.

Demolition, however, is very much out of the ordinary. The psychological impact of seeing a landmark destroyed is big, and once there is a huge pile of rubble where Busch Stadium once stood the spin will be hard to justify. There will be a disruption.

The old Stadium is now gone, and a scar left in its place. At the rate it will take the Cardinals to redevelop the old site, the city and its residents will be faced with that scar for a long time to come.

~ Michael R. Allen


More information

  • Built St. Louis: Busch Stadium
  • Wikipedia article
  • Busch Stadium Demolition Diary


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