Built in 1966, the prison gained its nickname "The Workhouse" from an 1840s city ordinance that allowed forced labor as a punishment for criminals sentenced in law court who couldn't pay their fines. The Workhouse became infamous for its poor living conditions,
prisoner abuse, and
penal labor. On July 4, 2018, Close the Workhouse, a prison-abolition group, held demonstrations outside
city hall to protest the inhumane conditions of the prison. In 2019, Arch City Defenders, a
public defender organization, filed a class-action lawsuit against the facility's inhumane living condition. The lawsuit alleged that the civil rights of detainees within the facility had been violated by the poor sanitation, limited ventilation, and poor medical care. The lawsuit said temperatures in the prison sometimes surpassed . In response, St. Louis spent $40,000 on temporary portable air conditioning for the prison. In 2021, St. Louis
Mayor Tishaura Jones proposed closing the Workhouse on her first day in office. The Workhouse was later closed on June 17, less than a month into her term. In 2025, it was demolished. ==References==