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From this perspective, the Gateway Arch seems to be leaning over the the walkway. In reality it's quite level.

Total Lunar Eclipse, 4/15/14, under the Gateway Arch, St. Louis, MO.

St. Louis Missouri

The obligatory Gateway Arch photo.

 

Constructed in 1965, it is 630 feet (192 m) wide at its base and stands 630 feet (192 m) tall. Built as a monument to the westward expansion of the United States, the Arch has become the iconic image of St. Louis.

  

ISO 100, 15mm, f9, 1/125 on tripod. Fill light, increase vibrance, Nik Polarization filter, some curves, and cloned out some of the trash.

One hand shot out the window while driving 60 mph., photo of Gateway Arch, in St. Louis, Missouri

To give a sense of scale, the little black dot on the bottom right is a bird!

Archives pick. I've got hundreds of under-evaluated shots from the past couple years. Here's one from a quick scroll through that caught my eye.

 

I was helping my buddy drive a car across country including a 30 min stop in St Louis to walk around a the arch. I've subsequently been back with my wife and been up in the arch. Super impressive, highly recommended!

  

St. Louis, Missouri Skyline at Dusk

 

Shot from Cahokia Mounds, World Heritage Site, Collinsville, Illinois

Full Moon at the Gateway Arch

Mississippi River Overlook, E. St. Louis, IL

Gateway Arch (1965) and Eads Bridge (1875). St. Louis, Missouri.

Containers on Union Pacific's ILBG4B 07 roll by the Gateway Arch.

 

3/11/2025

- The spring is here and trees like magnolia are blossoming, this is taken in a nice morning under the Gateway Arch.

Gateway Arch

Jefferson National Expansion Memorial

St. Louis, Missouri

 

5 Image HDR

 

I’ve been unmotivated to edit any of the shots I took on our trip to see one of my favorite bands VNV Nation in St. Louis early last month, but the night before last, after a few beers, I decided to have a look at the photos and to my delight I found a few that I wanted to work with. Unfortunately, I was only in St. Louis for less than 24 hrs so I didn’t have any time to look around, but I do know that I want to definitely go back. I will admit, it has the most comfortable driving conditions of any city I’ve ever been in. We stopped by the Gateway Arch on our way out of the city after a delicious brunch at Pappy’s Smokehouse (I highly recommend the pulled pork, but remember the line can be an hour long).

 

Built as a monument to commemorate the westward expansion to the West by the United States, construction on The Gateway Arch was finished in 1965, but wasn’t opened to the public until June 1967. It is the tallest manmade monument in the US and the Statue Of Liberty would fit under it. The idea of the arch was first thought of in 1933 and by the end of that decade the land had been acquired, but it would take another 30 years of contests, working with the railways and other things to finally get construction started. The skin of the arch is stainless steel and inside at each foot is an elevator that can take you to an observation area at the pinnacle of the structure that offers views of both East St. Louis in Illinois and downtown St. Louis.

 

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Independence Day 2013. St Louis, Missouri, USA.

I'm standing in the observation deck of the Gateway Arch in St. Louis and looking straight down. (Scanned from a Kodachrome slide)

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