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词条 Union Station (Houston)
释义

  1. History

     Construction and rail use  Railroads and destinations  Decline  Use in the 21st century  Ballpark-era 

  2. See also

  3. References

{{Infobox NRHP
| name = Union Station
| nrhp_type =
| image = Union Station Houston Texas (HDR).jpg
| caption = The building's exterior in 2010
| location= 501 Crawford St., Houston, Texas
| coordinates = {{coord|29|45|25|N|95|21|23|W|display=inline,title}}
| locmapin = Texas#USA
| built = {{Start date|1911}}
| architect = Warren & Wetmore
| architecture = Classical Revival
| added = November 10, 1977
| area = {{convert|1|acre}}
| governing_body = Private
| refnum = 77001448[1]
| designated_other2=TSAL
| designated_other2_date=5/28/1981
| designated_other2_number=337
| designated_other2_num_position= bottom
}}

Union Station is a building in Houston, Texas, in the United States. Dedicated on March 2, 1911, and formerly a hub of rail transportation, the building now serves as a cornerstone for Minute Maid Park.[2] It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and has since been superseded by Houston's Amtrak station.

History

Construction and rail use

In 1909 the Houston Belt and Terminal Railway Company commissioned the design of a new union station for Houston from New York City-based architects Warren and Wetmore. The location called for the demolition of several structures of Houston prominence. Horace Baldwin Rice's residence and Adath Yeshurun Congregation's synagogue among other structures were removed.[3]

With an original estimated cost of US$1 million, Union Station was constructed by the American Construction Company for an eventual total of five times that amount.[4] Exterior walls were constructed of granite, limestone, and terracotta, while the interior used an extensive amount of marble. It was completed and opened on March 1, 1911. At the time, Houston, with seventeen railways, was considered the main railroad hub of the Southern United States.[5] This is also evident by the Seal of Houston, which prominently features a locomotive. Two more floors were added the following year.[6]

Railroads and destinations

The station served as the main inter-city passenger terminal for Houston for over seven decades thereafter.

Major railroad lines served:[7]

  • Burlington Northern
    • Texas Zephyr to Dallas and Denver
  • Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad
    • Twin Star Rocket, to Minneapolis, via Dallas, Ft. Worth, Kansas City and Des Moines
  • Missouri Pacific
    • Texas Eagle, to St. Louis; Houstonian and Oleanian to Beaumont, Baton Rouge and New Orleans; Pioneer and Valley Eagle to Brownsville and Corpus Christi, Texas
  • Santa Fe; unnamed train to Memphis, Tennessee
    • Texas Chief to Chicago, and service from Houston to Clovis, New Mexico and Temple, Texas (for Santa Fe trains to Richmond and Los Angeles, California and Chicago)

The Southern Pacific Railroad maintained its own station approximately one mile from Union Station. The Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad also maintained its own station about 0.8 miles from Union Station. {{Css Image Crop |Image = MapHouston1913.jpg |cWidth = 200 |cHeight = 200 |oTop = 2210 |oLeft = 1940 |Location = right|Description = Section of a map of Houston from 1913, showing the location of the station and yards, the eventual ballpark site. (Select the image to view the full map.)}}

Decline

Passenger rail declined greatly after World War II. When Amtrak took over most intercity rail service in 1971, Union Station was one of two stations used by the new company, the other being the new Southern Pacific station built in 1959 that served the Sunset Limited. However, it soon became apparent that Amtrak could not afford to maintain two stations in the area. The last regularly-scheduled train that stopped at Union Station, the Lone Star (successor of the Texas Chief), was rerouted to the Southern Pacific station on July 31, 1974. With this move, the building effectively ceased to be a public facility and was taken over by the Houston Belt & Terminal and its parent railroads as office space and a dispatching center. One section of the building in the south end of the second floor was leased to the Houston Society of Model Engineers, which operated a large HO scale model railroad layout they named the "Texas, Crawford & Prairie RR", after the three streets which form the boundary of the original property of the station. On November 10, 1977, the building was named to the National Register of Historic Places.

Use in the 21st century

In 2005 Southern Pacific 2-10-2 982 was moved from Hermann Park to the corner of Texas Avenue and Avenidas de las Americas between the George R. Brown Convention Center and Union Station.[8] In 2013 it was donated to the Nau Center for Texas Culture to be located in the Get Big Things Done gallery [9] However, construction of the Center was halted in March 2015 due to "[s]kyrocketing construction costs and the challenge of raising $80 million within a short period..."[10]

Ballpark-era

{{Main|Minute Maid Park}}

Plans for a new Houston ballpark to replace the Astrodome began in 1995, and originally called for a site to be used at the Astrodomain. In August 1996, Houston's Union Station received a US$2 million grant from the Texas Transportation Commission for renovation in a separate project.[11] Plans for the new ballpark's location drastically changed by September mostly in response to Enron Chairman Kenneth Lay's input and pledge to substantially contribute to funding if placed downtown.[12] It was at this time that the Union Station location was proposed by Lay.

Construction of Enron Field, now named Minute Maid Park, was completed thereafter with Union Station preserved and renovated as the ballpark's main lobby. It opened on April 7, 2000.

See also

  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Harris County, Texas

References

1. ^{{NRISref|version=2010a}}
2. ^Before baseball, Union Station a monument to classic architecture
3. ^{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/houstonahistory00writmiss |title=Houston: A History and Guide |authors=Workers of the Writers Program of the Projects Administration in the State of Texas |authorlink=Works Progress Administration |year=1942 |publisher=The Anson Jones Press |page=260 |accessdate=December 18, 2013}}
4. ^{{cite news |title=Grand Station of Terminal Co. |publisher=Magnolia Park News |date=September 19, 1909 |page=1}}
5. ^{{cite book |url=https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Houston:_Where_Seventeen_Railroads_Meet_the_Sea |title=Houston: Where Seventeen Railroads Meet the Sea |last=Farbar |first=Jerome Hammond |year=1913 |publisher=H. H. Tammen Company |accessdate=December 18, 2013}}
6. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.houstonrrmuseum.org/union/union.htm |title=Houston Union Station: The Great Hall Revealed |author=Marsh, Tom |publisher=Gulf Coast Chapter NRHS |year=1999 |accessdate=December 18, 2013 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131219092653/http://www.houstonrrmuseum.org/union/union.htm |archivedate=December 19, 2013 |df= }}
7. ^Official Guide of the Railways, June, 1961
8. ^JCI Houston - Southern Pacific 982
9. ^ 
10. ^ 
11. ^{{cite news |title=Renovation plans to get Union Station back on tracks |author=Feldstein, Dan |publisher=Houston Chronicle |date=August 29, 1996 |page=36}}
12. ^{{cite news |title=Astros near decision to stay - if downtown |author=Williams, John |publisher=Houston Chronicle |date=September 13, 1996 |page=1}}
{{National Register of Historic Places in Texas}}{{Portal bar|Houston|National Register of Historic Places|Texas|Trains}}

14 : 1911 establishments in Texas|1974 disestablishments in Texas|Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway stations|Former Amtrak stations in Texas|Former railway stations in the United States|Former Burlington-Rock Island Railroad stations|National Register of Historic Places in Houston|Neoclassical architecture in Texas|Railway stations closed in 1974|Railway stations on the National Register of Historic Places in Texas|Railway stations opened in 1911|Former Missouri Pacific Railroad stations|Union stations in the United States|Railway stations in Houston

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