How collaboration drives globalization on the Agricultural Coast | Mary Lamie | TEDxStLouisWomen
How do you future-proof the way people and goods move? Mary Lamie knows. A licensed professional engineer with over 30 years in transportation, she leads the Bi-State Development’s operations of the Gateway Arch, the St. Louis Downtown Airport, the Riverboats at the Gateway Arch, and the nationally recognized St. Louis Regional Freightway. Mary has built game-changing public-private partnerships that make St. Louis a model for freight and infrastructure, earning national recognition and fueling the region’s economic edge. She’ll reveal how smarter, more connected systems can transform how we travel, trade, and thrive. Mary Lamie is the Executive Vice President of Multimodal Enterprises for Bi-State Development, where she oversees critical regional assets including the Gateway Arch, Gateway Arch Riverboats, St. Louis Downtown Airport, and the St. Louis Regional Freightway. A national leader in freight and multimodal strategy, she spearheads public-private partnerships to enhance the region’s freight infrastructure and position the bi-state area as a global logistics hub.Her efforts have earned the region national recognition for regionalism and transportation innovation, significantly boosting competitiveness for infrastructure funding and economic development.Mary’s accolades include the 2022 Institute of Transportation Engineers Professional of the Year, the 2019 World Affairs Council Gateway Globe Award, and the 2017 St. Louis Business Journal Most Influential Business Women Award. She is widely respected for advancing freight mobility, fostering collaboration, and driving regional impact. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx
More from TED
- 10:51Bringing Back Music Lost for 2,500 Years | Tharun Sekar | TEDxElliots BeachWhat does music from 2,500 years ago sound like? Until recently, no one knew.Tarun Sekar, shares how a simple question "Why do we only see Western instruments , where are our own ancient Indian instruments ?"led him on an obsessive journey to resurrect the Yazh, an ancient Tamil harp lost to history for over two millennia. With no working instrument to study, no recordings to guide him, and only fragments of poetry from Sangam literature, Tarun spent a year piecing together clues from ancient texts. His curiosity refused to let him quit & he succeeded in bringing back a sound unlike any Guitar or Veena, a voice from India's forgotten musical past coming alive again. Tarun proves that small curiosities can unbury centuries of silence. His work challenges us to ask: What melodies & wisdom from our own heritage are we ignoring? Can Entrepreneurship be our way to explore our world & build what matters? The Artist who brought Back 2500-Year-Old lost music Instrument This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx
- 11:35Creating an empathetic approach to children’s behavior | David Palmer | TEDxFullertonNOTE FROM TED: This talk only represents the speaker’s personal approach to and understanding of the nervous system and emotional regulation. TEDx events are independently organized by volunteers. The guidelines we give TEDx organizers are described in more detail here: http://storage.ted.com/tedx/manuals/tedx_content_guidelines.pdfWhen a child lashes out, what if it isn’t defiance—but survival? In this powerful TEDx talk, veteran educator David explores how children’s “misbehavior” often hides a single question: Am I safe with you? Drawing on neuroscience and decades of experience, he introduces the CALM method—Center, Affirm, Lead, Meet—as a roadmap for connection instead of control. His message is clear: when adults choose calm over chaos, we don’t just change behavior—we transform lives. If you’d like to contact Dr. David A. Palmer directly, please visit www.drdavidapalmer.comDr. David A. Palmer, Ed.D., is an educator with over 30 years of experience in classroom and school administration, as well as the father of six adopted neurodivergent children. Through his trauma-informed, nervous-system-centered approach, he empowers overwhelmed parents and teachers to shift from compliance to connection, transforming the way we respond to fostering emotional regulation and resilience in children and teens. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx




