ST. LOUIS 鈥 When a deadly tornado hit 最新杏吧原创 last month, it left an unprecedented amount of debris in its wake. The wreckage of destroyed homes spilled onto the streets. Uprooted trees blocked roads. Pieces of torn roofs blew off and landed blocks away.
In the five weeks since, city crews and contractors have collected construction and demolition material, destroyed trees, furniture, personal belongings and more 鈥 enough to fill at least 9,400 standard garbage trucks.
The job is far from over. Residents and volunteer groups have pushed what they can to the curb, into piles waiting for pickup.
鈥淪o much debris is still sitting there,鈥 said Doug Lee, a volunteer who has spent the past month driving around the worst-hit areas giving food and supplies to residents in north 最新杏吧原创.

A front-end loader scoops up debris from partially collapsed buildings at the intersection of Newstead Avenue and Ashland Avenue in 最新杏吧原创 on Tuesday, June 17, 2025. The buildings were damaged by the May 16 tornado.
Most of the damage is in north 最新杏吧原创 neighborhoods, though the tornado also ripped up trees and damaged structures in Clayton, Skinker-DeBaliviere and around and in Forest Park. Five people were killed.
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Many north city residents still live surrounded by ruins and debris. Tents pitched on sidewalks and in parking lots are scattered between piles of bricks. Trees still occasionally lay across the roofs of homes. And wreckage still lines the curbs.
鈥淚f you drive down Labadie Avenue (near Kingshighway Boulevard and Natural Bridge Avenue), it looks the Twilight Zone,鈥 Lee said. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 even look real, it鈥檚 so bad.鈥
City departments have dedicated at least 27 different crews to the cleanup effort, city spokesman Rasmus Jorgensen said, and contractors are also using at least 30 trucks a day. But right now, there鈥檚 no official estimate for how much debris is left covering north 最新杏吧原创, or how long cleanup will take.
鈥淐ity workers, with tremendous help from volunteer contractors and residents, have collected enormous amounts of debris,鈥 said Mayor Cara Spencer said in a statement Tuesday. 鈥淎t the same time, we know there鈥檚 a lot more work to do, and I understand the frustration. We will keep removing debris from our neighborhoods until the work is done.鈥
So far, city and contractor crews have picked up 15,000 cubic yards of what they call 鈥渕ixed construction and demolition debris,鈥 including bricks, the pieces of destroyed homes and personal items, city spokesperson Rasmus Jorgensen said.
After being collected by city crews, the loads are taken to a transfer station, where they鈥檙e sorted and transported to the Roxana Landfill in Illinois, said a spokesperson for Republic Services, which runs the transfer station.
Tree service companies are taking felled trees and vegetation to 最新杏吧原创 Composting, in the Near North Riverfront area.
鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be more than another two months would be my guess,鈥 said Patrick Geraty, the company鈥檚 president. Missouri law mandates that green waste be composted instead of going to landfills, like regular construction debris.
最新杏吧原创 Composting has been the sole city contractor processing post-tornado tree damage. At the beginning of cleanup, immediately after the May 16 tornado, as much as 20,000 cubic yards came in daily.

An industrial wood chipper spits out bits of wood into a 12-foot-tall pile聽at 最新杏吧原创 Composting in the North Riverfront area of far north 最新杏吧原创, on Thursday, June 12, 2025.
The 19-acre site is full of an ever-growing number of 12-foot high piles of branches, trunks and leaves 鈥 plus rows and rows of the mulch it becomes after being composted. But even though that seems like a lot, Geraty said, it鈥檚 only the beginning.
鈥淭here鈥檚 probably been in the neighborhood of 250,000 to 300,000 cubic yards collected so far,鈥 he said last week. 鈥淥ur initial estimate had the storm debris as high as half a million cubic yards. So we鈥檒l just have to see.鈥
Last week, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers arrived in 最新杏吧原创 to consult with city officials on the scope of the debris. There鈥檚 no word yet on what these new strategies will look like, said Jorgensen, the city spokesman.
And in an area where as many as 70% of affected residents are uninsured, it鈥檚 unclear how some of the damaged homes will ever be repaired or how that debris will ever be cleared.
At some of the worst-damaged sites there鈥檚 limited actions the city or its contractors can take, Jorgensen said. Some homes have been so destroyed they鈥檙e unlivable, but city workers and volunteers can鈥檛 touch what鈥檚 left because they鈥檙e private property and the owners aren鈥檛 around. They're looking at options, he said.聽

Collapsed buildings are seen in the 4500 block of 最新杏吧原创 Avenue in the Greater Ville neighborhood, near a sea of homes with damaged roofs and blue tarps covering them, on Tuesday, June 17, 2025.
For vacant buildings hit by the tornado, though, which may still be spilling debris and construction materials into the streets and neighboring properties, the city has more options. Earlier this month, the city announced it would be demolishing nearly 200 of such buildings owned by the Land Reutilization Authority.
The 最新杏吧原创 Development Corporation, which oversees the LRA, did not respond to requests for an update on the demolition program.
To help clean debris, Gov. Mike Kehoe last month deployed the Missouri National Guard to north 最新杏吧原创. There, they set up debris collection sites, telling residents to haul their own debris to drop-off sites so it could be transported by guardsmen to local landfills.
But the Guard鈥檚 presence ended June 8, and Lee, the volunteer, said it didn鈥檛 do much to help whittle down the piles of debris still lining streets.
鈥淲hen I heard they were sending 42 guys down here, I thought 鈥楾hat has to be a typo,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淔orty-two guys wouldn鈥檛 put a dent in all of this.鈥

A pile of debris from a collapsed home in the 3200 block of Newstead Avenue in the Greater Ville neighborhood of 最新杏吧原创 on Tuesday, June 17, 2025. The building was destroyed when a 23 mile-long and up to a mile wide EF3 tornado tore through the 最新杏吧原创 area in May.
Leonard Stewart, a resident of the Greater Ville neighborhood, said he and his neighbors are tired of living among the debris and damage.
鈥淭his area has been neglected,鈥 he said.
Stewart said these days he watches people drive into his neighborhood for a look at the tornado devastation. They slow down, he said, but then drive on.