Cherokee Street is home to more than 30 black-owned businesses, offering everything from STL fashion, craft beer, hookah lounges & incredible food.
Cherokee Street is home to more than 30 black-owned businesses, offering everything from STL fashion, craft beer, hookah lounges & incredible food.
Shakespeare Festival is coming to Cherokee Street this weekend! Find the details below for the *free* show + all the summer markets, pop-ups & events to make for a great weekend.
A weekend filled with grand openings & great music. Don't miss it! Find a bit of what's on deck for Cherokee Street below.
Head to Little Jamaica Lounge this Thursday and you'll find a live performance by @SheSoMorena, oxtail & mouth watering Caribbean food, $5 rum punch, good vibes & masked entry.
Follow @LittleJamaicaSTL >>
SWADE'S Cherokee Street medical marijuana dispensary opens to the public this Friday - and what better way to celebrate than with a block party! Head to the parking lot directly behind their shop to find food trucks, music, medical cannabis vendors, retail and art pop-up vendors and more.
MORE INFO >>
Head to the corner of Cherokee and Iowa for a curbside concert featuring The Gaslight Squares every Friday. Bring a chair, wear a mask, and enjoy the takeout windows at Earthbound and Yaquis.
MORE INFO >>
Head to the corner of Cherokee and Iowa for Nick Gusman and the Coyotees at 7pm, and The South Grand Polka Band at 5:30. This is a free and family friendly event. Please order at the takeout windows at Yaquis and Earthbound. Bring your own chair and blanket, and a mask for ordering.
Throughout the Summer Burger 809 is sticking to weekend hours — so don't sleep on these delicious burgers, salmon sliders & Soul Food Sundays!
@Burger 809 Food Pics >>
The Fortune Teller Bar is back open to the public! Get a break from the heat and enjoy a cold beer in a dark & cozy booth, or get your cards read with the tarot readers Thursday-Saturday!
St. Louis summer heat won't stop this street! Head to Cherokee Street this weekend for Murder Mystery Dinner Theater, curbside concerts, a Monaco gallery opening, Filipino BBQ brunch & much, much more.
The Cherokee CID Arts Committee has launched its second call for public art proposals, funding new murals and public art on Cherokee Street.
Looking for weekend plans in St. Louis? Look no further. Jazz concerts curbside at Iowa & Cherokee. A 17+ vendor artist market at The Whiskey Ring. WERQFEST meet & greet. And it doesn't stop there.
The Cherokee Street Community Improvement District is launching an Exterior Camera Grant Program to improve safety by improving the camera coverage on Cherokee. This program is for business owners and building owners in the District and is a *reimbursement* program; Funds will be reimbursed upon purchase and installation of the cameras.
APPLICATION DEADLINE: FRIDAY August 20th at 11:59PM
Applications for this round of grants are due by August 20th, 2021. The grants will be awarded by September 20th, 2021.
The district will provide a grant to assist with the cost of the exterior cameras and installation up to $2,000. Funds will be reimbursed upon completion of the project and must provide copies of paid invoices. There are three other conditions:
To apply, please complete the online application below by Friday August 20th at 11:59 PM.
Having issues with the application form? You can also fill it out here.
Cherokee Street's 2021 Cinco de Mayo festival has been cancelled, due to pandemic restrictions. While vaccinations are increasing and many things are moving in the right direction, we are not there yet for an event of this style and size - which traditionally convenes tens of thousands on one day to party on Cherokee.
But all is not lost. While we will not be partying in the street,there are still a number of ways we can celebrate Cinco safely and most importantly support our street's small businesses that rely on the annual festival.
Check out one of the delicious ideas we're cooking up below & stay tuned for more to come!
Throughout the month of May, taco lovers from around the region are invited to take a stroll down the Taco Walk-o-Fame, try 8 different featured tacos from taquerias and restaurants on Cherokee Street, and vote for their favorites via our online bracket.
The masterminds behind each of these Cherokee Street establishments have hand picked what they believe is the best taco on their menu. Last taco standing will win the prized Golden Taco Trophy.
Follow @CincoDeMayoSTL on Facebook & Instagram to stay up to date with the latest. Full bracket coming soon!
Pianos for People, the nonprofit organization that provides free refurbished pianos and lessons to those who couldn’t otherwise afford them, will deliver its 300th piano on Mon., March 29, also recognized as International Piano Day.
As part of International Piano Day, celebrated annually on the 88th day of the year in honor of the number of keys on a piano, piano players of all ages and abilities are encouraged to play in public places. Pianos for People will have various teachers and students playing a piano in the studio’s street side window throughout the day. The studio is located at 3138 Cherokee St.
The 300th piano will be delivered to Amani Dugger, a sixth-grade student at
Pamoja Prep Academy. The 12-year-old, who has dreams of becoming a cardiac sonographer, has been playing the piano for five years, is a current student at the studio and has attended the organization’s popular summer music camp the last few years. She is currently practicing at home on a small keyboard, without the preferred standard 88 keys.
Dugger will receive her new piano from Ballwin resident Laurie Bowen. Bowen, who played the piano for years as a child, received the 44-inch Hamilton Studio Piano as a birthday gift from her husband, Tom, in 2008. Bowen first learned about Pianos for People during a news segment she watched several years ago and was impressed with the organization’s concept.
“While I took lessons as a child, I didn’t have natural talent, nor the discipline to practice every day, but I did enjoy making music,” Bowen said. “Playing was just fun for me and it helped me work through the normal emotional and stressful typical teen years. This piano is not a piece of furniture but a beautiful way to make art and soothe the soul. I’m so thrilled it will have a new home with Amani."
Dugger’s piano marks the 300th delivery made by the nonprofit organization since its inception in 2012.
“It is life stories such as Amani’s and donors such as Laurie that continue to
motivate and inspire us to provide free quality instruments and lessons to those who could not otherwise afford them,” said Matt Brinkmann, executive director of Pianos for People. “A piano is more than just a piano. It can be an agent of change and inspiration for people, and we see this again and again in our work, especially in stressful times.”
In addition to the piano delivery program, the organization’s piano school on Cherokee Street offers free lessons to more than 100 students, as well as an increasing number at the organization’s Ferguson satellite studio. Lessons were conducted virtually this past year due to the pandemic; in-person classes are beginning to resume at both studios with COVID restrictions in place.
Pianos for People will also be holding its successful summer camp for students of all levels beginning June 7. The hands-on classes, which attract more than 150 youth during those critical out-of-school hours, allow students the opportunity to create and produce their own music, as well as broaden their skill level and comprehension of music theory.
Photo Credit: Pianos for People
As a result of the 2020 Call for Artists from the Cherokee Street CID Arts Committee, two murals have come to life on the street created by local artists. Looking to get out of the house? Take a walking tour of the public art on Cherokee Street by following along our Cherokee Street Mural Map.
This mural was created on the western wall of Elaine's Sandwich shop in October 2020 by Neeka Allsup (ig: @neekaz). Neeka is an oil painter from Austin Texas, currently residing in the Gravois Park neighborhood.
Learn more about Neeka & her work >>
This mural was painted by Christopher Burch (ig: @goya_goon) in November/December 2020. Burch is an artist, events organizer, and educator based in San Francisco and St. Louis, and a member of the Screwed Arts Collective.
”’The Endless Possibilities for Flight’ is a reimagining of the Icarus myth. Taking place after Icarus has fallen from the heavens, crashing back down to earth, their wings no more, just piles of wax. ”Is flight still possible?” the wounded hero asks themselves. At this point, Icarus realizes that their wings aren’t necessary for the trip into the heavens; instead, it’s about being the embodiment of the idea itself that produces flight," said Burch.
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3407 S. Jefferson, Suite 515
St. Louis, MO 63118
Copyright © 2019 All Rights Reserved
3407 S. Jefferson, Suite 515
St. Louis, MO 63118
Copyright © 2019 All Rights Reserved
3407 S. Jefferson, Suite 515
St. Louis, MO 63118
Copyright © 2019 All Rights Reserved
3407 S. Jefferson, Suite 515
St. Louis, MO 63118
Copyright © 2019 All Rights Reserved
3407 S. Jefferson, Suite 515
St. Louis, MO 63118