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Nashville Union Station
and Trainshed, Nashville, Tennessee, 1970. National
Historic Landmark photograph taken by Jack Boucher
The Nashville Union Station and Trainshed were constructed in
the 1890s as part of the Louisville and Nashville (L&N) Railroad's
construction program to improve passenger facilities. As a major
transfer station on the Louisville and Nashville and the Nashville,
Chattanooga and St. Louis lines, the architecture and size of
the train station and shed articulated the importance of Nashville
to passenger transport to the West and Midwest. The station was
designed by Richard Montfort, an engineer employed by the railroad.
Montfort was trained at the Royal College of Science in Dublin,
Ireland, and was influenced by the work of H.H. Richardson. The
train station design is reminiscent of Richardson's Alleghany
County Courthouse in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Spanning a length of 200 feet, the Nashville Trainshed was the
longest of the trainsheds built by the L&N in the 1890s during
their improvement phase. This made it the longest single-span,
gable roof structure constructed in the Unites States, surpassing
the St. Paul Union Depot trainshed by eleven feet. The Nashville
trainshed epitomized the height of the gable roof type and its
metal-framed construction made significant contributions to modern
building practices.
The adjoining train station was constructed in the Romanesque
Revival architectural style using Bowling Green gray stone and
Tennessee marble. The illustrations that graced the interior walls
of the train station depicted the agricultural, mechanical, and
commercial pursuits of the State of Tennessee. On the south wall
there was also an illustration of the "1900 Limited,"
a special passenger train that provided express service between
St. Louis and Nashville.
Nashville Union Station and Trainshed, Nashville,
Tennessee. Detail of exposed trusses. National
Historic Landmark Photograph.
In 1975 the Nashville Union Station and Trainshed were designated
a National Historic Landmark. The L&N Railroad transferred
ownership of the train station to the General Services Administration
(GSA) in 1979 and thereafter it was transferred to the Metropolitan
Government of Nashville and Davidson County in 1985. The station
was leased, rehabilitated and converted to a hotel. The easement,
baggage building, and shed were transferred to CSX. Ownership
of the trainshed and baggage building were then transferred to
Gateway to Nashville, LLC. The baggage building was remodeled
in the late 1990s and is currently used for office space and a
restaurant.
Nashville Union Station and Trainshed, Nashville,
Tennessee, January 2001. View of entrance to trainshed, now a parking
lot, facing east.
National Historic Landmark photograph taken by Tennessee Historical
Commission.
In 1996 a fire damaged the station hotel and an adjacent trainshed
truss. Subsequently the owners of the trainshed removed its roof
leaving the frame and trusses exposed to the elements. The area
directly beneath the trainshed was thereafter used as a parking
lot. In October 2000 the parking lot was closed after engineers
concluded that the structure was unsafe due to years of deterioration.
As a result, the trainshed was demolished between January and
February 2001. National Historic Landmark designation for the
Nashville Union Station and Trainshed was withdrawn on July 31,
2003. However, the station still remains on the National Register
of Historic Places for its significance at the local level.
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