phkmn2000 http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/photo/vintage/ct-vintage-union-station-photos-20150908-photogallery.html Vintage pictures from the Chicago Tribune.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/photo/vintage/ct-vintage-union-station-photos-20150908-photogallery.html
Vintage pictures from the Chicago Tribune.
Johnny
Thank you all for the kind comments and the discussion about the station and its history! It's been an enlightening and enjoyable thread for me!
-ChrisWest Chicago, ILChristopher May Fine Art Photography"In wisdom gathered over time I have found that every experience is a form of exploration." ~Ansel Adams
wanswheel
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
That shot reminds me a lot of 30th St. in Philly.
It's been fun. But it isn't much fun anymore. Signing off for now.
The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any
Perhaps in the days of the open concourse there were more breezes. I remember how dingy things used to be.
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
I usually exit and enter CUS from the Clinton Street side and I'm familiar with the set-up for most special functions. Generally, the waiting room and the passages from Clinton to the waiting room are closed off for functions. The section under Canal Street is taken up by ticket windows (Metra & Amtrak) and the baggage area.
CShaveRR Norris, we're going to have to get you out of seclusion and into some of the "Good Lands"!Balt, I think All-Nation disappeared around 1980. It was getting pretty threadbare for years by then. Of course, the block it was on has a completely diferent character now. (And yes, I was in all of those stations, though I arrived maybe a year too late to see the old concourse at the Union Station.)Johnny, I saw a Metra report saying that the Great Hall and the "breezeway" were closed today for some special function. Do you suppose they were referring to the passage under Canal Street?
Norris, we're going to have to get you out of seclusion and into some of the "Good Lands"!Balt, I think All-Nation disappeared around 1980. It was getting pretty threadbare for years by then. Of course, the block it was on has a completely diferent character now. (And yes, I was in all of those stations, though I arrived maybe a year too late to see the old concourse at the Union Station.)Johnny, I saw a Metra report saying that the Great Hall and the "breezeway" were closed today for some special function. Do you suppose they were referring to the passage under Canal Street?
CShaveRR Balt, I think All-Nation disappeared around 1980. It was getting pretty threadbare for years by then. Of course, the block it was on has a completely diferent character now. (And yes, I was in all of those stations, though I arrived maybe a year too late to see the old concourse at the Union Station.)
Balt, I think All-Nation disappeared around 1980. It was getting pretty threadbare for years by then. Of course, the block it was on has a completely diferent character now. (And yes, I was in all of those stations, though I arrived maybe a year too late to see the old concourse at the Union Station.)
From 58 to 63 it couldn't be beat for model railroading.
Deggesty Murphy Siding CopCarSS Great Hall, Chicago Union Station by Chris May, on Flickr Taken on my trip to IL/WI back in July. YashicaMat LM with Tri-X 400 stand developed in Rodinal 1:100. As always, C&C more than welcome! Of all the neat photos you post, this one might be of some place I've actually seen. If I had ridden a commuter train into Chicago from Hanover Park, is this where I would have ended up? To answer your question, you would have had to turn left after you were about half way in towards the south tracks, and gone west, under Canal Street--it is a long walk.
Murphy Siding CopCarSS Great Hall, Chicago Union Station by Chris May, on Flickr Taken on my trip to IL/WI back in July. YashicaMat LM with Tri-X 400 stand developed in Rodinal 1:100. As always, C&C more than welcome! Of all the neat photos you post, this one might be of some place I've actually seen. If I had ridden a commuter train into Chicago from Hanover Park, is this where I would have ended up?
CopCarSS Great Hall, Chicago Union Station by Chris May, on Flickr Taken on my trip to IL/WI back in July. YashicaMat LM with Tri-X 400 stand developed in Rodinal 1:100. As always, C&C more than welcome!
Great Hall, Chicago Union Station by Chris May, on Flickr
Taken on my trip to IL/WI back in July. YashicaMat LM with Tri-X 400 stand developed in Rodinal 1:100.
As always, C&C more than welcome!
Of all the neat photos you post, this one might be of some place I've actually seen. If I had ridden a commuter train into Chicago from Hanover Park, is this where I would have ended up?
To answer your question, you would have had to turn left after you were about half way in towards the south tracks, and gone west, under Canal Street--it is a long walk.
Murphy Siding Of all the neat photos you post, this one might be of some place I've actually seen. If I had ridden a commuter train into Chicago from Hanover Park, is this where I would have ended up?
You still can ride that train, Metra's Milwaukee District West Line timetable lists Hanover Park as an intermediate stop.
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
BaltACD Remember investigating Union Station (also Grand Central, CNW Station, Dearborn Station, LaSalle St. Station and the IC Station down on the lakefront) in the late 50's & early 60's on my monthly or thereabouts trips to All Nation Hobby Shop.
Remember investigating Union Station (also Grand Central, CNW Station, Dearborn Station, LaSalle St. Station and the IC Station down on the lakefront) in the late 50's & early 60's on my monthly or thereabouts trips to All Nation Hobby Shop.
That was one great hobby shop!
C&NW, CA&E, MILW, CGW and IC fan
http://www.unionstationmp.com/
Amtrak issued a RFP on 10/16 to try and squeeze more people through the concourse, and start to repurpose the mail spaces and platforms.
Don't blame Amtrak. It was originally called the Great Hall. The problem with Union Station (1925, Burnham & Graham) isn't the Headhouse Building's Great Hall/waiting room. The problem is the concourse and the rat's nest above it. The original expansive Beaux-Arts concourse was demolished and replaced with a much smaller facility under one of the Gateway Center structures in 1969 and renovated in 1991. In 1969 the railroads that owned, Chicago Union Station Company (the succesor railroads to the PRR, CB&Q and Milwaukee Road) made that decision, not Amtrak, which became the owner in 1971.
It was the waiting room in 1943, and right up until Amtrak coined the "Great Hall" appellation when it built the current pressure-cooker for passengers to wait in. Note how dark the place was, with the blacked-out ceiling.
These monoliths were built in an era when the loss of the modality's dominance wasn't realized, much less internalized by the industry. The demand curve was endlessly upward, so they better build to meet future need.
Chris, I think your image captures the awesomeness of the place beautifully, and I daresay that the black-and-white was probably the more prudent choice artistically.Beyond that...people these days!Complaining about the cloudy day, when the waiting room's glass ceiling was blacked out for a good 30 or more years after World War II. And complaining about the one-block walk from waiting-room to gate, which pales in comparison to the walk from security checkpoint to departure gate at any decent-sized airport.The old concourse served its purpose very nicely. One would hope that a good redesign of the space of (and the space above) the existing rat's-maze could be reconfigured to afford more breathing room, and perhaps a couple more through tracks.
CSSHEGEWISCH The waiting room (Great Hall sounds too pompous) was located between Canal and Clinton because it wouldn't fit anywhere else. Chicago Union Station is double-ended and the main concourse absorbs all of the space between the odd-numbered (north side) and even-numbered (south side) tracks and gates.
The waiting room (Great Hall sounds too pompous) was located between Canal and Clinton because it wouldn't fit anywhere else. Chicago Union Station is double-ended and the main concourse absorbs all of the space between the odd-numbered (north side) and even-numbered (south side) tracks and gates.
schlimmThe Great Hall waiting room never made much sense beecause it is and always was across the street, far from the terminal.
During a large part of Union Station's life, it served many passengers transferring between trains. Even many passengers transferring to other stations would spend time there, before or after their Parmalee Transfer trip. While it makes less sense now, it's still a useful safety valve during high travel periods.
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