St. Louis Gateway Arch to replace Monopoly’s Boardwalk?

A local forum points out Hasbro’s Monopoly board-game is getting a new Here and Now edition. The gimmick is the addition of cities, national landmarks and attractions, and allowing Internet voting for selection of those icons represented.

St. Louis’ candidates are the Gateway Arch (most recognizable), the Delmar Loop (incorrectly represented on Hasbro’s site with a photo from downtown), and Laclede’s Landing (St. Louis downtown riverfront scene). The Arch dominates the local race with 95% of St. Louis’ 43,976 votes.

Checking the results on the other cities, there’s more of a fight between landmarks spreading out their votes, and they don’t have much more voters than St. Louis. The promotion details explain:

the vote totals will determine where on the board those landmarks will be placed. The top voted city will be honored with the coveted blue property traditionally occupied by Boardwalk.

Could St. Louis claim the hottest spot in Monopoly?

(this post brought to you by “the procrastination of more interesting things”)

Busch Stadium Open House

Kelly and I joined Sean and Lucy at the new St. Louis Busch Stadium for an open house event yesterday evening. All the public spaces were open, and only a few sections still under construction and the private boxes were off limits. Food and beverage venders were open, so you could even get a taste of game day.

I’m not a big enough baseball fan to know how well the new ballpark will actually work for the players and the spectators, but I like the new space – it seems to fit in nicely; I especially like how connected to the rest of downtown it feels with open views inside and out.

I look forward to Ballpark Village filling out the empty block where half the old stadium existed, a few more buildings would be nice addition to the scenery.

Cardinals Postpone the Busch Stadium Wrecking Ball One More Day

The St. Louis Cardinals just pulled a win over the Houston Astros, prolonging their season one more game and delaying the wrecking ball waiting to tear down Busch Stadium. We caught the end of the game right before Edmonds walked, so we got to hear the roaring Texas crowd go silent with Pujols’ home run. Good GOD that was gratifying.

Which is funny, because I’m not really a baseball fan, but I do hope the Cardinals can beat Houston. Damn I hate Texas.

St. Louis Blues Trade Chris Pronger

ST. LOUIS – St. Louis Blues Senior Vice President & General Manager Larry Pleau today announced the club has traded defenseman Chris Pronger to the Edmonton Oilers for defensemen Eric Brewer, Doug Lynch and Jeff Woywitka.

The article offers some encouraging details on the acquisitions, and not much about Pronger. Which is fine by me – I don’t have many good things to say about him.

The joy I felt when I heard the news this morning reminded me that despite not watching hockey for the past year and not thinking I cared, I apparently still do.

Chris Pronger was an expensive oaf of a defenseman and captain, and I’ve blamed many losses on him. I’m happy to see the team gain some new blood and free up salary money to hopefully spend more appropriately.

With the new NHL 2005-2006 rule changes, it looks like we’ll see faster paced games.

I think I’m looking forward to this season.

World-building for Computer Games

My senior year of college, I lived with Casey and Kelly in the “penthouse” apartment of Lindell Towers across the street from SLU. The penthouse got its name because it sat at the top floor of the building, was adjacent to the roof patio, and was as wide as the apartment building itself. Five windows on the front face of the building looked south above SLU’s campus, two windows west across the patio down Lindell Ave, and the bathroom and two bedroom windows on the east just looked into the adjacent building, which was more or less exciting, depending on what the neighbors were up to.

It was a good place to spend my last year of school. The proximity to campus made the last minute dash from bed to class pretty efficient, but when not at class or work, it was a good place to crash with plenty of room for friends.

But this post isn’t about the apartment physically; more virtually I suppose.

At some point it occurred to me to create our apartment with the mapping software I had to create levels for a computer game (the Action mod to Quake2), possibly while contemplating jumping from 14 floors. Not in a suicidal way, I just wondered what the free fall would be like.

The apartment design wasn’t too complicated, with the exception of the curved vaulted ceiling in the main room that took some time to properly fit. Once I completed the interior, I decided to fill out the other areas we could access physically on that floor and walled in (and floored and ceilinged) the hallway, elevator shaft, and began the stairwell that connected to the patio. Not wanting to create the rooms for each apartment on our floor, I just gave the neighbors locked doors. Since the stairwell had patio access, I had to add the patio, as well as an empty 13th floor apartment below ours since the patio was between floors and could see them both. I couldn’t very well leave empty spaces, which lead me to just fill in the area below our two floors for all 14 stories. This made the apartment building look more like a building, but it lacked a street. It was just floating in space, and I wouldn’t have a place to land if I jumped out the window, so I paved the block between my newly created apartment building and the empty void where SLU’s campus would be (is?).

To keep from roaming around the dark, light sources had to be placed in this new world. I wasn’t content with just placing some magic ambient light in random places as it didn’t seem very natural, so I created a few light-emitting lamps and ceiling fans inside and some light posts outside. The main room in the apartment was furnished with a couch and two chairs to provide some additional reference for scale. I created the counters and appliances in the kitchen, because it was the smallest room and I figured it was the fastest to complete. But then I decided to made the fan blades spin, which took more time than all the furnishing.

I wanted to build out more areas, like the entire street, ultimately creating sections of SLU’s campus also, but I was realizing that the computer hardware and game software didn’t really support large expansive open worlds with far lines of sight. Instead, it was more capable of handling enclosed spaces connected to each other, which is not what I wanted to do. So the grand plan that could have been was quickly halted before I wasted too much (more) time.

in game apartmentWhile the map I created of our apartment wasn’t very large, it was pretty close to accurate, which made roaming around the floor eerie. Especially since the game I made it for is a first person shooter, so I was walking around the place I lived armed with a gun painting the walls with a laser sight. An experience I didn’t anticipate having, ever. Speaking of anticipated experiences, jumping off the 14th floor is a little anti-climactic. You jump, experience a second or two of freefall, and your body unceremoniously crunches on impact with the street. Or the light post, depending on your aim. It occurs to me now I could have made some driving cars as targets, or simply painted a big bulls-eye on the ground if I really wanted to play with my jumping from the roof game, but now I’m just sounding more disturbed.

I bring all of this up now because last night I found the apartment map files and loaded this up again, after presuming it all lost from the last time I switched computers. Walking around the apartment was creepy then, it still is now.

But now is several years later, and the software and hardware support the worlds I want to create, as was evident last night while Sean and I played UT2K4 on wide open maps with lots of detail. I want the mapping software for UT so I can do some more world-building again.

MaggieMoo’s Ice Cream for Lunch

So Fresh, It Moos.

MaggieMoo’s has opened a series of Missouri locations, most recently one in West Oak Center; it’s within walking distance from work. After a warm lunch outside, we figured ice cream would cool us off, and help prolong the afternoon out of the office.

This Treatery holds more ice cream flavors than the Ladue one, so be excited. For those passionate about Better Batter (tastes like yellow cake batter) ice cream *cough* Kelly *cough*, they also have a Chocolate Better Batter. We sampled. It’s evil. It tastes like you think it would.

I replaced the disturbing flavor with the tastier Chocolate Amooretto mixed with strawberries. I’ll probably have to go back this weekend so someone can get her fix, and I’ll try something new then.


Blueberry Milkshake. Good Times.