Indianapolis Union Station
The Indianapolis Union Station is an intercity train station in the Wholesale District of Indianapolis, Indiana. The terminal is served by Amtrak's Cardinal line, passing through Indianapolis three times weekly.
Indianapolis was the first city in the world to devise a union station, in 1848. The station building opened on September 20, 1853 at 39 Jackson Place, operated by the Indianapolis Union Railway. 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 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 was the eastern terminus of the Hoosier State until its discontinuation on June 30, 2019.
Architecture
Thomas Rodd's design clearly shows the influence of architect Henry Hobson Richardson. 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 clock tower. The 1888 station included a large street-level iron train shed.
History
Early history
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. Between these dates, nearby Columbus, Ohio had built Columbus Union Station in 1851, becoming the first union station built. However, Indianapolis's station had more elements of a cooperative union station, especially as the Columbus station had one railroad lease space to another, while the Indianapolis station was a joint effort and ownership agreement.As Indianapolis and its railroad traffic grew, the limitations of the original structure became increasingly obvious. In 1886, Thomas Rodd was hired. At the time, Rodd was employed by the Pennsylvania Railroad, but did independent civil engineering and architectural projects on the side. The new station was completed in 1888, and during 1889 320,996 passenger train cars and 861,991 freight cars passed through the station. In 1893 approximately 25,000 passengers rode an average of 120 passenger trains daily.
By 1900, over 200 trains a day were being serviced, forcing the station to eventually build an expansive train shed on an elevated platform so as not to interfere with regular street traffic. It was once second only to Chicago's Union Station as a Midwest railroad hub.
After World War II
In the 1940s, several railroads still called at the station: the Baltimore & Ohio, the Chicago, Indianapolis and Louisville Railroad, the Illinois Central, the New York Central, the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad, and the Pennsylvania Railroad. After World War II, intercity passenger rail travel in the United States began to decline.Passenger services, particularly named trains, at the union station included:
Operators | Named trains | Western or northern destination | Eastern or southern destination | Year discontinued |
Amtrak | Cardinal | Chicago | New York, New York | Still active |
Amtrak | Hoosier State | Chicago | terminus | 2019 |
Amtrak | James Whitcomb Riley | Chicago | New York | 1974 |
Amtrak | Kentucky Cardinal | Chicago | Louisville, Kentucky | 2003 |
Amtrak | James Whitcomb Riley | Kansas City | New York | 1979 |
Monon Railroad | Hoosier | Chicago | terminus | 1959 |
Monon Railroad | Tippecanoe | Chicago | terminus | 1959 |
New York Central | Corn Belt Special | Pekin, Illinois | terminus | 1957 |
New York Central | Southwestern Limited / Knickerbocker | St. Louis, Missouri | New York | 1967 |
New York Central | Cincinnati Special / Sycamore | Chicago | Cincinnati, Ohio | 1967 |
Pennsylvania Railroad | Indianapolis Limited | terminus | New York | 1957 |
Pennsylvania Railroad | Kentuckian | Chicago | Louisville | 1968 |
Pennsylvania Railroad, and Penn Central, 1967-1970 | Penn Texas | St. Louis | New York | 1970 |
Pennsylvania Railroad | St. Louisan | St. Louis | New York | 1968 |
Pennsylvania Railroad, and Penn Central, 1967-1971 | South Wind | Chicago | St. Petersburg, Sarasota and Miami | 1971 |
Pennsylvania Railroad, and Penn Central, 1967-1971 | Spirit of St. Louis | St. Louis | New York | 1971 |
Decline
Throughout the 1960s and well into the Amtrak era, the number of train passengers declined to such a trickle that in cities in which rail stations did not serve commuter traffic, most were allowed to physically decline to a point where many were closed and some demolished. Indianapolis' Union Station almost suffered that fate. By the late 1970s, vagrants and vandals had taken over much of the facility and numerous police and fire runs were made to the cavernous building. Local business and political leaders began looking for some way to preserve Union Station and transform it into a vital part of the city again. Also in the 1970s, Amtrak planned to run its proposed AutoTrak service out of the Indianapolis Union Station, but this planned service was ultimately scrapped.In 1971, the city's mayor allocated $197,000 toward purchasing the building.
The station was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on July 14, 1982. Beginning in 1984, the facility was renovated and converted from its primary use as a railroad station to a festival marketplace. The Indianapolis architecture firm of Woollen, Molzan and Partners was responsible for the restoration the station's historic shed, which reopened in 1986. Union Station became a collection of restaurants, nightclubs, and specialty stores that included an NBC Store and a model train retailer. The eastern end of the former train platform area featured a large food court, plus several self-contained bars and nightclubs. Statues of individuals who might have been seen in the railroad station in prior years were installed throughout the facility. The 273-room Crowne Plaza Hotel took up much of the western portion of the train shed, with twenty six of its rooms being housed within thirteen old Pullman cars.
In 1997 the facility's marketplace era concluded with the departure of the last non-hotel and non-transportation tenant, a Hooters restaurant, which relocated to another nearby downtown building. The September 1995 opening of the Circle Centre Mall, just a block to the north, had drawn off the overwhelming majority of Union Station's retail customers. A planned pedestrian bridge between these two structures had been denied by officials for historic preservation reasons, and a direct underground connection was deemed to not be economically feasible. The city of Indianapolis was forced to take ownership of Union Station and began to try to find another reuse for much of the building. After some time, it began leasing out space for a wide variety of purposes, including office use and an indoor go-kart track.
21st century
In 2002, the 21st Century Charter School was started within the facility. The still-successful hotel expanded to take up a larger portion of the building. Additional companies and organizations began to inquire about and lease space in the station. In 2006, tenants included Bands of America, the Consulate of Mexico, the Indiana Museum of African American History, the Japan-America Society of Indiana, and the Indiana Pacers academy. Many of the building's internal directories still display Spanish as well as English, reflecting the demographic changes in Indianapolis, as well as being a left over from the days when the building housed the Mexican Consulate. The Grand Hall of Union Station is also rented out for banquets and other special events.In January 2011, a new underground walkway between the newly expanded Indiana Convention Center and nearby Lucas Oil Stadium opened. It also contains a connection to the Crowne Plaza hotel at the west end of Union Station. This climate-controlled pedestrian path replaces an above-ground link between the hotel and the now demolished RCA Dome, which stood where the new wing of the convention center is now situated.
Passenger train service has been very limited in the Amtrak era. When Amtrak began operations in 1971, it ran three trains through Indianapolis–the South Wind, the James Whitcomb Riley, and the Spirit of St. Louis. However, most of these trains ran over deteriorating Penn Central trackage, and Amtrak eventually routed all of them away from Indianapolis except for the National Limited, successor of the Spirit of St. Louis.
Amtrak withdrew the National Limited in 1979, severing Indianapolis from the national rail network. It also isolated Amtrak's primary maintenance facility, the Beech Grove Shops in nearby Beech Grove Rail service returend to Indianapolis in 1980, when the Hoosier State began running daily to Chicago. Northbound trains would leave in the morning, while southbound trains would arrive in the evening. It was joined in 1986 by the New York-to-Chicago Cardinal,. successor of the James Whitcomb Riley. For most of the time from 1986 until Indiana withdrew its support for the train in June 2019, the Hoosier State ran on the four days that the Cardinal did not operate, thereby providing daily service along the route.
From 1999 to 2003, the station was served by the Kentucky Cardinal, an extension of the Hoosier State that ran to Louisville, operating as a section of the Cardinal on the days that the Cardinal ran. The southbound train split from the eastbound Cardinal at Union Station, while the northbound train joined the westbound Cardinal for the journey to Chicago. With the discontinuation of the Hoosier State, Indianapolis is served only one train for only the second time in its history.
The station is served by two Amtrak Thruway Motorcoach lines–one serving western and central Illinois and another that stops at Nashville, Louisville, and Cincinnati en route to Chicago.
Since 1979, Amtrak passengers use a waiting area in the southern portion of Union Station's old train shed, at street level along Illinois Street. The Amtrak station is co-located with the city's Greyhound bus depot, making this a multi-modal transportation hub, albeit a small one;, there is no commuter or light rail service in Indianapolis. The Greyhound ticket office is located along a wall opposite the Amtrak ticket office.
In FY 2013 Indianapolis averaged about 99 passengers daily, among the fewest for a station serving a metropolitan area of more than two million people. It is the busiest stop in Indiana served by Amtrak.
The 1888 station building is mostly leased for offices to pay for the building upkeep. The city struggled with finding a use for the building that is financially viable and high-profile. The Crowne Plaza Hotel still operates in the train shed structure, and leases out the main concourse, the Grand Hall, for weddings and other events.