Union Station is the inter-cityrailway station forWinnipeg,Manitoba, Canada. It is a grandbeaux-arts structure situated nearThe Forks indowntown Winnipeg, and was designated aNational Historic Site of Canada in 1976.[1] The station is also aHeritage Railway Station, so designated since 1989.[2]
Constructed between 1908 and 1911, the station was built as a joint venture between theCanadian Northern Railway,National Transcontinental,Grand Trunk Pacific Railway, and the Dominion government.[1] The first train to enter the station did so on 7 August 1911, with the official opening the following year on 24 June 1912.[3]
Union Station was designed byWarren and Wetmore,[1] the architects responsible forGrand Central Terminal inNew York City.[4] Designed in the Beaux-Arts style and constructed from localTyndall limestone,[3] Union Station was one of Western Canada's largest railway stations.[1]
The building extends for 110 metres alongMain Street, with the entrance close to the intersection of Main Street andBroadway.[5] The building's entrance doors are located under a decorative iron canopy that projects from the austere white limestone.[5] Atop the building is a large dome.
Union Station was for many years an important transportation hub in the region. Thousands of immigrants passed through its halls, and it was home to the regional office of theCanadian National Railway which inherited the building from its predecessors. There were once several trans-border trains to Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota operating out of Winnipeg. The Great Northern Railway had itsWinnipeg Limited, while the Northern Pacific Railway also had an unnamed day train. All of these services were discontinued prior toAmtrak and there are no present plans to reinstate any of them.
Canadian National Railway turned over passenger rail services toVia Rail in 1978, which has operated out of Union Station ever since. At present, Union Station is used by two trains - the Toronto-VancouverCanadian, and theWinnipeg – Churchill train.
Although it is still used as a passenger train terminal, the functions of Union Station have changed with time. For instance, the terminal building contains offices occupied by non-railway tenants. The trainshed, which includes a total of eight through tracks and four passenger platforms, houses theWinnipeg Railway Museum on two tracks and two platforms. It is a variation of Bush-type shed designed byLincoln Bush.
Union Station is one of two major inter-city railway station buildings inDowntown Winnipeg. However, unlike Union Station, theCanadian Pacific Railway Station ceased functioning as a railway station upon the creation of Via Rail Canada in 1978 and is now used for purposes unrelated to transportation.
During 2011, Via Rail undertook a $3 million renovation of the station, composed largely of repairs to the roof and trainshed, as well as various improvements to increase the energy efficiency of the building.[6]
Renovations have included the installation of a new roof, the upgrade and insulation of the main roof fromR0 to R25 and the replacement of low efficiency boilers with 3 high efficiency near condensing boilers.[7] Due to renovations, the gas consumption in the building has been reduced by 82%, electrical consumption has been reduced by 25%, and water consumption has been reduced by 2 million gallons per year since 1990.[7] The heating costs for the 248,000 square feet (23,000 m2) building have been reduced to 67 cents per square foot / year, which is well below the requirement of $1 per square foot / year for the Manitoba eco-efficiency rating.[7] The renovated building has received the BOMA BESt Level 2 designation.[7] Since the environmental upgrades, the building has won the Building Owners and Managers Association of Manitoba (BOMA) 2012 Earth Award for Multi-Use Building.[8]
A further $6.5 million in renovations were completed in 2014, including renovations to the passenger waiting areas, accessible public washrooms, improvement of the East entrance, repair and repainting of therotunda, as well as various safety improvements.[9][10]
Across the tracks from the station was the CNR East Yard (opened in 1888 forNorthern Pacific and Manitoba Railway), which was partially replaced by the Symington Yards in 1962 and finally closed around the 1980s as parking lot andThe Forks.
Future plans call for theWinnipeg Railway Museum to be moved elsewhere in the metro area to make way for a rapid transit hub station where several routes that cross the city will meet.[11]