Missouri
A great American city of brick and baseball, free museums, and one of the country's best hospitals — at Midwest prices.
St. Louis is a value play with a very specific profile: world-class healthcare, deep urban culture, real seasons, and a brick-built sense of place. The retirees who land here happily go suburban — Chesterfield, Kirkwood, Webster Groves, Clayton — where the housing, safety, and amenity story is dramatically different from the city as a whole. Some people fall in love. Others can't get past the summers, or the headlines.
St. Louis was once the fourth-largest city in America. The 1904 World's Fair happened here. So did the first Olympics on American soil, the invention of the ice cream cone, and a hundred other small civic firsts. Then the city did what so many great American cities did between 1950 and now: it lost half its population to the suburbs, and the brick streets emptied out. What's left is more interesting than the headlines suggest.
The metro is structured by an emphatic City–County divide. The City of St. Louis covers sixty-one square miles, holds about 280,000 people, and contains both genuine urban gems — the Central West End, Lafayette Square, Tower Grove — and serious safety challenges. The County, the suburban donut around it, holds another million people across dozens of independent municipalities. That's where retirees actually live. Kirkwood has a Norman Rockwell main street. Webster Groves has the brick bungalows. Clayton has the walkable downtown. Chesterfield has the Whole Foods and the surgical specialists.
What unites all of them is Forest Park — 1,300 acres in the geographic center of the metro, larger than Central Park, free in every meaningful sense. The art museum is free. The zoo is free. The history museum is free. The science center is free. Just south of the park, the Missouri Botanical Garden — one of the country's oldest and most respected — is a separate institution but part of the same fabric. There is no other major American city where a retiree of modest means has access to this much culture without writing a check. That, more than anything, is the St. Louis pitch.
Cardinals culture isn't a season here — it's a year-round social fabric. Four-generation season tickets. Spring training pilgrimages. Hall of Fame inductions in February that draw 15,000 people to a downtown ballroom.
— On St. Louis baseball as civic identity
A composite week of what an active St. Louis retiree's days could look like — drawn from the free-museum, Cardinals-game, brick-suburbs cadence locals describe when they say the city "punches above its weight." Most of these are western-suburbs rituals, since that's where the retiree story lives.
Almost every retiree who chooses St. Louis ends up in St. Louis County, not the City. The four suburbs below cover the spectrum from amenity-rich-suburban to walkable-downtown to estate-quiet.
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