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Indianapolis Union Station

Indianapolis
Indy Union Station Rails2.jpg
Location 350 South Illinois Street
Indianapolis, Indiana 46225
Owned by City of Indianapolis
Platforms 1 island platform (formerly more)
Tracks 2 (formerly more)
Connections Greyhound Lines
Burlington Trailways
Construction
Disabled access Yes
Other information
Station code IND
History
Opened 1979
Traffic
Passengers (2013) 36,162 Increase 3.7%
Services
Preceding station   BSicon LOGO Amtrak2.svg Amtrak   Following station
toward Chicago
Hoosier State Terminus
Cardinal
  Former services  
Baltimore and Ohio
toward Springfield
Springfield – Hamilton
toward Hamilton
Illinois Central
toward Effingham
Effingham – Indianapolis Terminus
New York Central Railroad
toward Chicago
Chicago – Cincinnati
(Big Four Railroad)
toward Cincinnati
toward St. Louis
St. Louis – Cleveland
toward Cleveland
toward Peoria
PeoriaIndianapolis Terminus
Terminus Indianapolis – Springfield
toward Springfield
Pennsylvania Railroad
toward Chicago
Chicago – Louisville
toward Louisville
toward South Bend
South Bend – Indianapolis Terminus
toward Vincennes
Vincennes – Indianapolis
toward St. Louis
St. Louis – Columbus
toward Columbus
BSicon LOGO Amtrak2.svg Amtrak
toward Chicago
Kentucky Cardinal
toward Louisville
toward Kansas City
National Limited
Indianapolis Union Railroad Station
Union station Indianapolis.jpg
South Illinois Street entrance.
Indianapolis Union Station is located in Indianapolis
Indianapolis Union Station
Indianapolis Union Station is located in Indianapolis
Indianapolis Union Station
Indianapolis Union Station is located in Indiana
Indianapolis Union Station
Indianapolis Union Station is located in the US
Indianapolis Union Station
Location 39 Jackson Place,
Indianapolis
Coordinates 39°45′47″N 86°9′34″W / 39.76306°N 86.15944°W / 39.76306; -86.15944Coordinates: 39°45′47″N 86°9′34″W / 39.76306°N 86.15944°W / 39.76306; -86.15944
Area 1.3 acres (0.5 ha)
Built 1886–1888 (head house); 1915–1922 (train shed)
Architect Thomas Rodd
Architectural style Romanesque
NRHP Reference # 74000032
Added to NRHP July 19, 1974

The Indianapolis Union Station was the first union station in the world, opening on September 20, 1853, by the Indianapolis Union Railway within the Wholesale District of Indianapolis, Indiana, at 39 Jackson Place. A much larger Richardsonian Romanesque station was designed by Pittsburgh architect Thomas Rodd and constructed at the same location beginning in November 1886 and opening in September 1888. The head house (main waiting area and office) and clock tower of this second station still stand today.

Amtrak, the national rail passenger carrier, continues to serve Union Station from a waiting area beneath the train shed. It is served by the Cardinal and is the eastern terminus of the Hoosier State.

Thomas Rodd's design clearly shows the influence of noted architect Henry Hobson Richardson (1838–1886). Historian James R. Hetheringon has concluded that Pittsburgher Rodd would have studied the nearly completed Allegheny County Courthouse designed by Richardson prior to his death in 1886. Considered by Richardson to be his best work, the Courthouse was highly influential, with the Union Station one of the oldest surviving examples.

The three-story Union Station is built of granite and brick, with a battered water table and massive brick arches characteristic of the Romanesque. It features an enormous rose window, slate roof, bartizans at section corners, and a soaring 185-foot clock tower. The 1888 station included a large street-level iron train shed.

The first railroad to reach Indianapolis was the Madison and Indianapolis Railroad, which began service there in 1847. Competing railroads began connecting Indianapolis to other locations, but each had its own station in various parts of the young city, creating problems for passengers and freight alike. This problem was common to many U.S. cities, but Indianapolis was the first to solve it with a union station, which all railroads were to use. In August 1849, the Union Railway Company was formed, and it began to lay tracks to connect the various railroads. Then in 1853, it built a large brick train shed at the point where all the lines met, becoming the first union station in the United States.


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