Union Depot (Lansing, Michigan)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Location637 East Michigan Avenue, Lansing, Michigan 48912
United States
Coordinates42°44′03.89″N 84°32′34.79″W / 42.7344139°N 84.5429972°W / 42.7344139; -84.5429972
Platforms1 (historically)
Lansing Union Depot
The Union Depot in Lansing, Michigan
General information
Location637 East Michigan Avenue, Lansing, Michigan 48912
United States
Coordinates42°44′03.89″N 84°32′34.79″W / 42.7344139°N 84.5429972°W / 42.7344139; -84.5429972
LinePlymouth Subdivision
Platforms1 (historically)
History
Opened1902
Closed1972
Former services
Preceding station New York Central Railroad Following station
Holt
toward Jackson
Bay City Branch Bath
toward Bay City
Preceding station Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Following station
North Lansing Grand RapidsDetroit Trowbridge
toward Detroit
Union Depot
Interactive map
Built1902
ArchitectSpier and Rohns
Architectural styleTudor Revival
NRHP reference No.95000869[1]
Added to NRHPJuly 21, 1995
Location
Lansing Union Depot is located in Michigan
Lansing Union Depot
Lansing Union Depot
Location within Michigan

The Union Depot is a former train station, located at 637 E. Michigan Avenue in Lansing, Michigan. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995.[1]

The first railroad through Lansing was the Amboy, Lansing and Traverse Bay Railroad, which arrived in 1863. The Jackson & Lansing Railroad followed in 1864, and in 1871 the Michigan Central Railroad began leasing these lines. Michigan Central constructed a wooden passenger depot at this spot in 1873. The depot also served the Detroit, Lansing and Lake Michigan Rail Road, which had constructed tracks through Lansing in 1868. In 1900, this line was consolidated into the Pere Marquette Railroad.[2]

However, also by 1900, the wooden depot was proving inadequate to service both the Michigan Central and Pere Marquette Railways, and the two companies jointly decided to replace the station in 1901. The Detroit architectural firm of Spier and Rohns, which planned many Michigan Central stations, designed the station. Construction began in late 1901, and was finished in 1902. The combined depot served both lines for decades, but with the increase in automobile traffic, ridership declined. The New York Central Railroad, the successor to Michigan Central, ceased its remaining passenger service (Jackson-Lansing-Saginaw-Bay City)[3] in 1959. The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway, the successor to the Pere Marquette, continued passenger service to Lansing (on the Grand Rapids-Detroit circuit)[4] only due to the threat of legal action, and when Amtrak took over passenger trains, they ended service to Lansing in 1971.[2]

The depot remained vacant for several years.[2] In 1978, restaurateur Peter Jubeck bought the building and transformed it into Clara's Lansing Station.[5] Retaining the quarter-sawn oak interior and installing locally crafted stained glass windows, the restaurant has a unique and historical atmosphere. In 1994, Jubeck purchased an old Pullman sleeper rail car, renovating it, and attaching to the building, opening it in 1999 to add more seating space.[5] Clara's Lansing Station was the sister restaurant of Clara's on the River located in the Michigan Central Depot in Battle Creek.

The restaurant closed on June 26, 2016 after 38 years of operation.[5] Later that year the building was purchased by Lansing-based Gillespie Group with plans to preserve the station for future reuse.[6] It has since been converted to restaurant space, which has included a Starbucks since 2022.[7]

Description

References

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