| The Cincinnati Museum Center at Union Terminal was originally built as Cincinnati's Union Terminal. Construction took place between 1929 and
1933. The architects of the massive Art Deco
building were Alfred Fellheimer and Steward Wagner, and the mayor at the time of the project's inception was Murray Seasongood. It took four years and 41 million dollars to complete.
Like other Union terminals and stations, it was a joint project of
several, in this case seven, railroad lines to create a single station for the entire city. The Union Terminal Company
was created to buil the terminal intself, the railroad lines into and out of the terminal, and to reconstruct the roadways that
were destroyed by this project. The new viaducts that the Union Terminal Company created to cross the Mill Creek valley ranged from well
built, like the Western Hills viaduct, to the hastely constructed and shabby, like the Waldvogel Viaduct.
During its heyday, the Terminal had a capacity of 216 trains per day, 108 in and 108 out. Inside the Rotunda of the Terminal,
two murals depicting the history of Cincinnati were created by Winold Reiss. Three lanes of traffic were
created to go in one side of the terminal, underneath the main rotunda of the building, and then out the other side, one for
taxis, one for buses, and one (although never used) for trains. However, the time period in which the terminal was built was one
of decline for train travel. While it had a brief revival in the 1940's, because of
World War II, it declined in use through the 1950's and the1960's.
In the early 1970's, the terminal closed its doors to train traffic, and was transformed
into a shopping center. Set up in cubicle-like partitions in the main rotunda, it failed after a few years. The terminal laid
empty for the next decade or so. In 1988, the City of Cincinnati passed a tax
levy to save the terminal from destruction and to transform it into the Cincinnati Museum Center. Interestingly enough, former
mayor Jerry Springer was one of the major proponents of saving the
building and tranforming it into a museum. Without his support, the building most likely would have been destroyed. It was opened
in 1990 and now provides a home to five organizations:
- Cincinnati History Museum
- Cinergy Children's Museum
- Museum of Natural History & Science
- Robert D. Lindner Family Omnimax Theater
- Cincinnati Historical Society Library
References
- Mecklenborg, Jake(2005). Cincinnati-Transit.net (http://www.cincinnati-transit.net/).
- Works Progress Administration(ed. Harry Graff)(1943). WPA Guide to Cincinnati: Cincinnati, a guide to the Queen City and
its neighbors. Cincinnati: The Cincinnati Historical Society. ISBN 0-911497-04-8.
External links
Cincinnati Museum Center at Union
Terminal Web Site (http://www.cincymuseum.org/)
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