
Written by Dick Fleming | Originally Published in Geospatial World Prior to its present status as a “location of choice” for Geospatial Intelligence companies, The Globe Building has had a storied history. The massive Art Deco Globe Building traces its roots to the dramatic growth of St. Louis following the City’s hosting of the World’s […]
Written by Dick Fleming | Originally Published in Geospatial World
Prior to its present status as a “location of choice” for Geospatial Intelligence companies, The Globe Building has had a storied history.
The massive Art Deco Globe Building traces its roots to the dramatic growth of St. Louis following the City’s hosting of the World’s Fair and the Olympics back in 1904. Originally built to serve as one of two major railroad stations in St. Louis, it was called the Illinois Terminal Railroad Building.
In its early days, The Globe Building became a hub of logistics and transportation infrastructure, which was essential to St. Louis’ robust growth in the 1920s.
Given the present 2022 attraction of Geospatial Intelligence firms, it’s noteworthy that several floors of the building were taken over by the U.S. War Department to house the Defense Mapping Agency during the Second World War, with hundreds of people working there every day, mapping and plotting logistics for both Europe and the Pacific during the World War II.
As the nation’s and St. Louis’ modes of transportation shifted in the 1950s, and passenger rail service was officially discontinued in 1958 – the building as a transportation hub became underutilized.
The St. Louis Globe-Democrat newspaper relocated in the building to accommodate larger presses, massive supplies of ink, and more paper. So, in 1959, the Illinois Terminal Railroad Building became the Globe-Democrat Building — with various floors dedicated to the advertising department, other floors for editorial departments, massive printing presses in place, and huge barrels of ink arriving every day by rail, as well as the distribution of the newspaper every day.
The Globe Building found its next life as the new Millennium approached; its unique infrastructure made the building an ideal location for tech firms seeking a downtown location.
As the owners of The Globe Building have undertaken the stunning high-tech adaptive reuse of this landmark Building, they’ve described the “new Globe Building” as having Big Space, Big Power, and Big Fiber.
The Globe Building’s unique physical attributes represented the necessary conditions for attracting and growing Data Centers — and now, for attracting and growing GEOINT and other tech firms:
The Globe Building has the on-site power and other infrastructure to handle individual businesses’ power and cooling needs. This infrastructure features updated electrical power with brand new, dedicated Ameren (the region’s utility) basement substations and diverse utility feeds with true ‘A+B’ utility power.
More than 40,000 SF available on the rooftop, The Globe provides abundant roof space for cooling support equipment and wireless transmission.