1006 Olive St
St. Louis, MO 63101
(314) 880-0701
Downtown Urgent Care (DUC) opened its doors in early 2009, at The Truman Building in the heart of Saint Louis, at 916 Olive Street, 4 blocks south of the Dome (Rams Football) and Americas Center, 4 blocks north of the Ballpark, (Cardinals Baseball) 4 blocks east of the Scottrade Center (Blues Hockey), and 7 blocks west of the Gateway Arch. Serving the Downtown community and metropolitan Saint Louis' need for walk-in / urgent care, DUC was created with the aim of providing the highest quality urgent medical care in a professional, friendly and time-efficient manner. DUC works with patients' primary care physicians, specialists and the local emergency rooms to ensure patients receive top quality care and follow-up. An increasing percentage of our patient visits are from returning patients and patient recommendations, which we hope is testament to the quality, convenience and affordability of the urgent care service we provide.
The location is in St. Louis, Mo. @ 730 Carroll St., stand 19, the herbs has a historic good for your health documentation, no records of killing anyone, or damaging their health when used correctly. You are the very best (DR. YOU) i.e. diabetes-blueberry leaves,mental stamina-blueberry leaves, red clover-menopause-blood purifier, skin problems,lamb's quarter--pure all inclusive for your health minerals, and vitamins, amino acids, ETC., ETC., ETC., I have 25 varieties of herbs good for everything known to man. I've been doing this for almost 20 years.
Wedding packages including two photographers, an engagement session, all-day coverage including photo delivery on a custom USB drive starting at $2799. Portrait packages start at $249. Please send us a message or give us a call for more information.
The Bell Telephone Building, located at 920 Olive Street in downtown St. Louis, Missouri, was built in 1889 for the purposes of housing the switchboard and local headquarters of the Bell Telephone Company. The building served as the main telephone exchange for St. Louis from its construction until 1926, and it is the oldest extant telephone building in St. Louis (and possibly was the first building constructed for the telephone industry in St. Louis).History and restorationThe earliest St. Louis telephone exchange was located in the National Bank Building at 417 Olive (since demolished) in 1878. By the late 1880s, space for a dedicated telephone exchange facility was needed. Groundbreaking occurred in 1889 after the acceptance of the Boston-based Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge design, and the final construction cost was $154,225. The main switchboard room was at the top of the building (then only six stories). Between 1890 and 1910 telephone use expanded dramatically, and the local St. Louis Bell Company merged with other Bell telephone companies to form Southwestern Bell by 1920. In 1923, Southwestern Bell absorbed the local St. Louis telephone competitor, Kinloch Telephone, adding to pressure on the capacity of the building. These pressures resulted in the construction of the nearby Southwestern Bell Building in St. Louis between 1923 and 1926.After Southwestern Bell vacated the building, it became used as a retail and warehouse facility for the St. Louis print company S.G. Adams Stationery, which was purchased by Comfort Printing in 1959 (but continued operating under the original name). The building became the flagship store for S.G. Adams during the 1960s through the 1980s. However, S.G. Adams refocused its business model on commercial printing in the early 1990s, closing its retail locations. The Bell Telephone Building became the final retail store of S.G. Adams, and it was closed and vacated in 1994.
Online menus, items, descriptions and prices for Sushi Ai - Restaurant - St. Louis, MO 63101