Kansas City Union Station
Union Station | ||||||||||||||||
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General information | ||||||||||||||||
Location | 30 West Pershing Road Kansas City, Missouri | |||||||||||||||
Coordinates | 39°05′05″N 94°35′07″W / 39.0848°N 94.5853°W | |||||||||||||||
Owned by | Union Station Assistance Corporation | |||||||||||||||
Line(s) | Kansas City Terminal Railway | |||||||||||||||
Platforms | 1 island platform | |||||||||||||||
Tracks | 4 | |||||||||||||||
Construction | ||||||||||||||||
Parking | Yes | |||||||||||||||
Accessible | Yes | |||||||||||||||
Other information | ||||||||||||||||
Station code | Amtrak: KCY | |||||||||||||||
Website | unionstation | |||||||||||||||
History | ||||||||||||||||
Opened | October 30, 1914 | |||||||||||||||
Closed | 1983 (except Amtrak Bubble) 1985 (Entire station closed) | |||||||||||||||
Rebuilt | November 10, 1999 (with Science City); 2002 (Amtrak service resumed) | |||||||||||||||
Previous names | Union Depot (April 8, 1878–October 31, 1914), West Bottoms | |||||||||||||||
Passengers | ||||||||||||||||
FY 2022 | 110,232[1] (Amtrak) | |||||||||||||||
Services | ||||||||||||||||
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Union Station | ||||||||||||||||
Location | Pershing Rd. and Main St., Kansas City, Missouri | |||||||||||||||
Area | 20.2 acres (8.2 ha) | |||||||||||||||
Built | 1901 | |||||||||||||||
Architect | Jarvis Hunt | |||||||||||||||
Architectural style | Beaux-Arts | |||||||||||||||
NRHP reference No. | 72000719[2] | |||||||||||||||
Added to NRHP | February 1, 1972 |
Kansas City Union Station (station code: KCY) is a union station opened in 1914, serving Kansas City, Missouri, and the surrounding metropolitan area. It replaced a small Union Depot from 1878. Union Station served a peak annual traffic of more than 670,000 passengers in 1945 at the end of World War II, quickly declined in the 1950s, and was closed in 1985.
In 1996 a public–private partnership undertook Union Station's $250 million restoration, funded in part by a sales tax levied in both Kansas and Missouri counties in the Kansas City metropolitan area.[3] By 1999, the station reopened as a series of museums and other public attractions. In 2002, Union Station returned to train service when Amtrak began providing public transportation services and has since become Missouri's second-busiest train station. The refurbished station has theaters, ongoing museum exhibits, and attractions such as the Science City at Union Station, the Irish Museum and Cultural Center, and the Todd Bolender Center for Dance and Creativity. Since 2016, it is a stop for the KC Streetcar.
History[edit]
Union Depot era[edit]
On April 8, 1878, Union Depot opened on a narrow triangle of land in Kansas City between Union Avenue and the railroad tracks of the Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad in present-day West Bottoms.[4][5] Nicknamed the "Jackson County Insane Asylum" by those who thought it was too large, it was the second union station in the country,[5] after the one in Indianapolis. The new depot was a hybrid of the Second Empire style and Gothic Revival. The lead architect was Asa Beebe Cross who "adorned the exterior of the building with intricate towers of varying heights, arched windows framed in stone and rows of dormers projecting from the steeply pitched mansard roof";[5] it had a clock tower above the main entrance that was 125 feet (38 m) in height. By the start of the 20th century, over 180 trains were passing daily through the station, serving a city whose population had tripled during its first-quarter century of operation.[5] In 1903, the lack of room for expansion and a major flood[6] led the city and the railroads to decide a new station was required.
Union Station era[edit]
The decision to build a new station was spearheaded by the Kansas City Terminal Railway, a switching and terminal railroad that was a joint operation of the Alton; Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe; Chicago, Burlington and Quincy; Chicago Great Western; Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific; Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific; Kansas City Southern; Missouri-Kansas-Texas; Missouri Pacific; St. Louis-San Francisco; Union Pacific; and Wabash railroads.
The new location was chosen to be a valley at 25th Street and Grand Avenue used by the Kansas City Belt Railway. It was south of the central business district, above and away from the floodplain.[5]
The architect chosen to design the Union Station building was Jarvis Hunt, a proponent of the City Beautiful movement.[7] The design was a main hall for ticketing, and a perpendicular hall extending out over the tracks for passenger waiting. The Beaux-Arts station opened on October 30, 1914, as the third-largest train station in the country.[8] The building encompassed 850,000 square feet (79,000 m2), the ceiling in the Grand Hall is 95 feet (29 m) high, there are three chandeliers weighing 3,500 pounds (1600 kg) each, and the Grand Hall clock has a six-foot (1.8-m) diameter face.[8] Due to its central location, Kansas City was a hub for both passenger and freight rail traffic. The scale of the building reflected this status.[citation needed]
Kansas City Union Station Massacre[edit]
Union Station made headlines on June 17, 1933, as four lawmen were gunned down by mafia members attempting to free captured fugitive Frank Nash.[9] Nash was also killed in the gun battle. The Kansas City Massacre highlighted the lawlessness of Kansas City under the Pendergast Machine and resulted in the arming of all FBI agents.[9]
Decline of train passenger numbers[edit]
In 1945, annual passenger traffic peaked at 678,363. As train travel declined beginning in the 1950s, the city had less and less need for a large train station. By 1973, only 32,842 passengers passed through the facility, all passenger train service was now run by Amtrak, and the building was beginning to deteriorate. The city government of Kansas City wished to preserve and redevelop the building. To facilitate this, in 1974, they made a development deal with Trizec Corporation, a Canadian redevelopment firm.[10] Included in the deal was an agreement that Trizec would redevelop the station. Between 1979 and 1986, Trizec constructed two office buildings on surrounding property, but did not redevelop the station. The deteriorating station closed in 1983, with the exception of a "bubble" inside the main hall that housed Amtrak's operations until 1985, when Amtrak moved all passenger operations to a smaller "Amshack" facility adjacent to the old station. At that point, the station was completely closed to the public. In 1988, the city filed suit against Trizec for the failure to develop the station; the case was settled in 1994.[10] For most of this time period, the building continued to decay.
Restoration[edit]
In 1996, residents in five counties throughout the Kansas City metropolitan area in both Kansas and Missouri approved the so-called "bistate tax", a 1/8 of a cent sales tax,[11] part of which helped to fund just under half of the $250 million restoration of Union Station.[10] Renovation began in 1997 and was completed in 1999. The remaining money was raised through private donations and federal funding. The renovations enabled Amtrak to move its operations back inside the main building in 2002.
Union Station receives no public funding. Current operating costs are funded by general admission and theater ticketing, grants, corporate and private donations, commercial space leases and facility rental. Union Station Kansas City, Inc. is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization which manages Union Station and which previously managed the Kansas City Museum.[12] Union Station hosts Science City (opened in 1999), a family-friendly interactive science center with more than 50 hands-on exhibits;[13] the H&R Block City Stage Theater, a live-action venue with productions for all ages; the Regnier Extreme Screen, the largest 3-D movie screen in the region at five and half stories tall; two restaurants, including Pierponts, an upscale steak and seafood restaurant, and Harvey's, many shops; the Gottlieb Planetarium, the largest planetarium in the area; and various temporary museum exhibits including the internationally acclaimed Dead Sea Scrolls in 2007, Bodies Revealed in 2008, Dialog in the Dark in 2009, Dinosaurs Unearthed in 2010 and Diana, A Celebration focusing upon Princess Diana in 2011. The Irish Museum and Cultural Center has been located in the station since March 17, 2007.[14]
Notable events[edit]
The old Union Station Powerhouse building was renovated by the Kansas City Ballet. It is the ballet's new home and has been known as the Todd Bolender Center for Dance and Creativity since August 2011.[15]
In April 2015 and again in 2017, the reality TV show American Ninja Warrior was filmed at Union Station.[16][17]
The 2023 NFL Draft was held in front of and partially inside of Union Station in April 2023.
2024 shooting[edit]
On February 14, 2024, a mass shooting occurred outside Union Station in which one person was killed and 22 others were injured soon after the Super Bowl LVIII victory parade and rally honoring the Kansas City Chiefs.[18]
Current services[edit]
The station is served by four Amtrak trains daily. The Missouri River Runner has round trip service to Gateway Transportation Center in St. Louis. The Southwest Chief departs for Chicago Union Station in the morning and for Los Angeles Union Station late evening.
Of the twelve Missouri stations served by Amtrak, Kansas City was the second busiest in the 2015 fiscal year, boarding or disembarking an average 421 passengers daily.[19]
Gallery[edit]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ "Amtrak Fact Sheet, Fiscal Year 2022: State of Missouri" (PDF). Amtrak. June 2023. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ "Audit: Bistate Commission spent tax money properly". Kansas City Business Journal. August 26, 2002. Retrieved April 19, 2020.
- ^ 39°06′12″N 94°35′48″W / 39.103237°N 94.5966428°W
- ^ a b c d e Ford, Susan Jezak (1999). "Union Avenue completed 1878, demolished 1915" (PDF). Missouri Valley Special Collections. Kansas City Public Library. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 1, 2017. Retrieved August 19, 2012.
- ^ "Flood of 1903". Kansapedia. Kansas Historical Society. Retrieved August 19, 2012.
- ^ "Jarvis Hunt, architect". University of Illinois at Chicago. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
- ^ a b "12 grand Amtrak train stations and their histories". USA Today. May 26, 2019. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
- ^ a b Silvey, Jennifer (June 16, 2019). "86 years later, a dark day in Kansas City remembered". WDAF-TV. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
- ^ a b c "Timeline". Kansas City Union Station. 2019. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
- ^ "Bi-State Commission". Mid-America Regional Council. 2019. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
- ^ "Union Station Kansas City, Inc". Propublica. May 9, 2013. Retrieved April 19, 2020.
- ^ "Science City takes important steps to woo more young visitors". The Kansas City Star. October 1, 2015. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
- ^ Roberts, Rob (September 2, 2016). "KC Irish Center buys a new home: historic Drexel Hall". Kansas City Business Journal. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
- ^ "A brief history of the Bolender Center". 2019. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
- ^ Engle, Tim (March 10, 2015). "NBC's 'American Ninja Warrior' will film at Union Station in April". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
- ^ "At Union Station Monday Night: They Came, They Saw, They Ninja'd (And Got Soaked)". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved January 11, 2018.
- ^ Powell, Tori B.; Hammond, Elise; Chowdbury, Maureen (February 14, 2024). "Live updates: Chiefs Super Bowl rally shooting leaves one dead and multiple injured". CNN. Retrieved February 14, 2024.
- ^ "Amtrak Fact Sheet, FY2015, State of Missouri" (PDF). Amtrak. November 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 20, 2016. Retrieved January 11, 2016.
External links[edit]
- 1914 establishments in Missouri
- Amtrak stations in Missouri
- Former Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway stations
- Downtown Kansas City
- Former Chicago and Alton Railroad stations
- Former Chicago Great Western Railway stations
- Former Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad stations
- Former Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad stations
- Former Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad stations
- Former Kansas City Southern Railway stations
- Former Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad stations
- Former Missouri Pacific Railroad stations
- Former St. Louis–San Francisco Railway stations
- Former Wabash Railroad stations
- National Register of Historic Places in Kansas City, Missouri
- Passenger rail transportation in Kansas
- Railway stations in the United States opened in 1914
- Railway stations on the National Register of Historic Places in Missouri
- Tourist attractions in Kansas City, Missouri
- Transit centers in the United States
- Transportation buildings and structures in Kansas City, Missouri
- Former Union Pacific Railroad stations
- Union stations in the United States