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Curious Louis: What’s up with that backward Maplewood sign?

Rick Jackoway recently moved back to St. Louis after 26 years away. When he drove under a sign on the MetroLink overpass on Manchester Road he thought, “Well, you don’t see that every day!”

So he asked our new Curious Louis project:

Why is the word Maplewood spelled backward on the sign going over Manchester Road, just east of Laclede St. Road? Always wondered.

“Are other people curious like me? Has this been done in other places around the country, or just Maplewood?” Jackoway elaborated when we talked.

I called Maplewood City Hall and found out the creation is indeed unique. But it isn’t just a sign, originally had nothing to do with the city’s name and wasn’t even commissioned by the municipality but by MetroLink’s Arts in Transit project.

The organization put out a call for ideas in 2006 and Brooklyn artist Janet Zweig answered. She paid a visit to the city of approximately 8,000 residents to get some ideas.

“People had lived there for generations and there were a lot of little family homes,” Zweig said. “But then younger people were moving in because it’s a good, inexpensive place to live.”

‘Backward into the future’

The backward Maplewood letters appear right to left in a side mirror.
Credit Cathy Carver
The backward Maplewood letters appear right to left in a side mirror.

The dichotomy made Zweig think of communications prophet Marshall McLuhan (who famously said in 1964, “The medium is the message.”) But it was another of McLuhan’s quotes that struck her: “We look at the present through a rear view mirror. We march backward into the future.”

With that in mind, Zweig noticed a couple of boarded-up houses, set for demolition.

“I had this idea of making this signage out of these houses to make this 'past' and 'future' of Maplewood real and concrete,” Zweig said.

The backwards D on the left is made of unfinished reclaimed items. Pieces in the forwards D on the right are new or refinished.
Credit Janet Zweig
The backwards D on the left is made of unfinished reclaimed items. Pieces in the forwards D on the right are new or refinished.

Zweig envisioned the word “Maplewood” spelled out properly, left to right, as drivers headed east on Manchester into the city, and flipped backward as they drove west. In the backward version, the brick, tile and doorknobs would remain worn, recalling the old days. Letters on the forward side would be made of new or refinished materials, showing the way ahead. Both would be illuminated at night.

She completed and installed the project in 2007, thinking, "people would find it delightful and funny."

Artist Janet Zweig remembers that in 2007 passersby would try to correct the installers. Zweig said she thought people would find it both delightful and odd.
Credit Janet Zweig
Artist Janet Zweig remembers that in 2007 passersby would try to correct the installers. Zweig said she thought people would find it both delightful and odd.

But not everyone understood it, according to Maplewood’s community development director Rachelle L’Ecuyer. While it was being installed, L'Ecuyer took calls from confused residents.

“They would say things like, ‘Hey, I just drove on Manchester. I think the guys’s got the letters on the sign backward,’” L’Ecuyer remembered.

Maplewood director of community development Rachelle L'Ecuyer said they get more positive than negative comments.
Credit Rachel L'Ecuyer
Maplewood director of community development Rachelle L'Ecuyer said they get more positive than negative comments.

It was mostly older folks, L’Ecuyer said. Even after they realized the name was supposed to be reversed, a few still didn’t like it.

“Some of them thought they were being made fun of. They’d say, ‘Oh they’re saying Maplewood is backward,’" L’Ecuyer said.

Still, there were more positive reactions than negative. And after all, art is supposed to be thought-provoking.

“Public art is all about the discourse,” L’Ecuyer said.

So what does our Curious Louis inquirer think about the story behind the sign?

“I will tell you, that’s much more interesting than I thought it was going to be,” Rick Jackoway said. “The artist really put some thought into it.”

The red dot shows the MetroLink overpass where the Maplewood sign art is installed.
Credit Mapbox OpenStreetMap
The red dot shows the MetroLink overpass where the Maplewood sign art is installed.

As for the naysayers, Jackoway reminds them to think back to the advent of St. Louis’ largest piece of public art, installed in 1965.

“Even with the Arch, some people were like, ‘Oh, not so much.’ But people have come to love it,” Jackoway said.

And just like the Arch, the Maplewood project went through more than one iteration before becoming the icon we see today.

One of the early ideas was to create LED letters to represent Maplewood, perhaps with people moving about. Rachelle L’Ecuyer said the design reminded her of a sculpture at Citygarden in downtown St. Louis.

The piece by British artist Julian Opie, called “This Is Kiera and Julian Walking,” is a popular attraction. But Zweig decided using LED for the Maplewood project would be too high-tech, not representative of the city. Jackoway thinks it was the right decision.

Rick Jackoway is a communications manager for a St. Louis law firm. He grew up in University City, moved away to Arizona and California, and now lives in Webster Groves with his wife and two daughters.
Credit Rick Jackoway
Rick Jackoway is a communications manager for a St. Louis law firm. He grew up in University City, moved away to Arizona and California, and now lives in Webster Groves with his wife and two daughters.

“It sounds a little complicated and I wonder if people would be looking at the sign and not the street,” Jackoway said. “I think if you put too much up there, it would be distracting.”

But the Maplewood forward-and-backward display, especially now that he knows the backstory?

“I think it’s very cool,” Jackoway said.

Follow Nancy Fowler on Twitter: @NancyFowlerSTL

Nancy is a veteran journalist whose career spans television, radio, print and online media. Her passions include the arts and social justice, and she particularly delights in the stories of people living and working in that intersection.