210 S. Canal, at
Adams Street
Upon
entering the central waiting room of the old Union Station
from the congested, commercialized rabbit warren of its
newer addition, you may feel as if you’d died and gone
to heaven. Celestial light pours in from distant, vaulted
skylights. Stone columns soar to gilded capitals on high.
The human din of fast food restaurants, news stands and
ATMs is dimmed, and silence reigns, its peace broken only
by a small child’s awestruck “Wow!”
The last of
Chicago’s great turn-of-the-century train depots, and
one of the few left in the nation, Union Station was
designed by the architectural firm Graham, Anderson,
Probst & White in the style to which Americans had
become accustomed at the dawn of the twentieth century.
Monumental architecture housed our colossal national
ambitions, and Chicago’s role as a railroad hub spurred
construction of multiple train stations in the immediate
area of the Loop. The Illinois Central and Rock Island
Depots, and our own Grand Central Station at Harrison and
Wells are now demolished, while Dearborn Station at Polk
Street has become a Galleria, but the 1909 Union Station
stands, and has been refurbished within the last decade.
The travertine interior is clean and bright, with rows of
polished wooden benches standing ready to offer relief to
the tired traveler.
The labyrinthine
interior of the station’s modernized track area is
frequently under construction, but the complex itself has
evolved into a civilized waystation for the traveler,
including both a Starbuck’s and a soundproofed
children’s play room. Twenty stories of office space
were planned above the train station itself, but only
eight were completed. Its restrained exterior is in such
good taste as to be almost invisible, and although the
Elgin clock faces that decorate its sides are infrequently
on time, its familiar architectural vernacular of
streetside colonnades and massive doors pleasantly evokes
the golden era of railroad travel.
If you are stranded
by a delayed train, excursions in the immediate vicinity
are unlikely to give you a taste of Chicago; to
appropriate Gertrude Stein’s estimation of Oakland,
California, “there’s no there there.” You can make
your way a block east to view the Chicago River, or head
two blocks north to visit local architect Helmut Jahn’s
glass-and-steel interpretation of a modern commuter rail
terminal at Northwestern Station. Your time will be well
spent, however, in the old waiting room, a place that
inspires revery. Its noble proportions and dignity speak
of a bygone time when public spaces honored the public
they were meant to serve.
You can preview the
station’s floorplan with a map found on http://chicago.sidewalk.com/detail/26723
or check out Amtrak’s website at http://www.amtrak.com
to discover how to get there from wherever you may be.
Happy rails to you!