User:Msollmann/new sandbox
The Union Terminal Company was created to build the terminal, railroad lines in and out, and other related transportation improvements. The site sits on the former land of Lincoln Park, an early Cincinnati park that opened in 1858 and consisted of a pond, grassy fields, and a baseball diamond.[1] Construction in 1928 with the regrading of the east flood plain of the Mill Creek to a point nearly level with the surrounding city, a massive effort that required 5.5 million cubic yards of landfill.[2] Other improvements included the construction of grade separated viaducts over the Mill Creek and the railroad approaches to Union Terminal. The new viaducts the Union Terminal Company created to cross the Mill Creek valley ranged from the well built, like the Western Hills Viaduct,[3] to the more hastily constructed and shabby, like the Waldvogel Viaduct.[4] Construction on the terminal building itself began in 1931, with Cincinnati mayor Russell Wilson laying the mortar for the cornerstone. Construction was finished ahead of schedule,[3] although the terminal welcomed its first trains even earlier on March 19, 1933 when it was forced into emergency operation due to flooding of the Ohio River. The official opening of the station was on March 31, 1933. The total cost of the project was $41.5 million.[citation needed]
- ^ "From Potter's Field to Union Terminal: The History of Lincoln Park - Adventures in the Subway and Street Improvements Digitization Project".
- ^ "Cincinnati's New Union Terminal Now in Service". Railway Age. 94 (16): 575–590. 1933.
- ^ a b writers, Linda C. Rose, Patrick Rose, Gibson Yungblut ; editors, Linda C. Rose ...; et al. (October 1999). Cincinnati Union Terminal: The Design and Construction of an Art Deco Masterpiece. Cincinnati, Ohio: Cincinnati Railroad Club, Inc. ISBN 0-9676125-0-0.
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has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Waldvogel Viaduct