KevinT
Active Member
So Amtrak now owns Washington's Union Station, here's their press release:
Amtrak | With New Responsibility at Washington Union Station, Amtrak is Initiating Plan to Elevate the Travel Experience
And the media's take on it:
Washington Post | Amtrak just took over Union Station. What does it mean for riders?
The Washington Post article is paywalled, but I think you get a freebie or two per month if you give them an email address, which you can always unsubscribe later. Two highlights:
Amtrak | With New Responsibility at Washington Union Station, Amtrak is Initiating Plan to Elevate the Travel Experience
And the media's take on it:
Washington Post | Amtrak just took over Union Station. What does it mean for riders?
The Washington Post article is paywalled, but I think you get a freebie or two per month if you give them an email address, which you can always unsubscribe later. Two highlights:
“There’s been this sort of artificial barrier through the middle of the building which we’ve been prevented from using it for the purpose it exists for,” said Roger Harris, Amtrak’s president. The terminal, he said, should be efficiently routing passengers to their trains.
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“There are some very basic things that could change on Day 1,” Harris said. “The queuing for [Amtrak trains] is very crunched up, and where we might have hundreds of people waiting, we now have more space in which to queue customers.” Harris said Amtrak may reconfigure the terminal so that vacant commercial real estate is moved elsewhere in the station to accommodate the queue space expansion, but the company is still in the process of figuring that out.
Union Station stakeholders, including Amtrak and the Union Station Redevelopment Corp. (which maintains oversight of the station as the federal government’s master leaseholder), have planned a larger modernization project that could cost $8.8 billion and take 13 years to complete, though there is no clear construction timeline yet. Renderings suggest a wide station atrium with trees and glass walls that let sunlight illuminate the building, as well as revamped tracks and concourses.