A few weeks before this winter’s multitude of mudslides started wiping out train tracks, affecting both Amtrak and Sounder service, I took Amtrak Cascades south to Portland. It was an odd direction for me to go, as usually I take the train from Everett north to Vancouver, B.C. After all, I’m a self-proclaimed Closet Canuck, with a somewhat strange addiction to most everything north of the 49th Parallel. But since I hadn’t spent any time in the "Rose City" since my last visit in August of 2008, I was happy to head off to Oregon for three days.
I rode into Seattle with my hubby on a drizzly weekday morning to catch Amtrak #501 to Portland. The train didn’t leave until 7:30 a.m., and with an hour to kill, I opted to wait at the nearby Zeitgeist Coffee. It’s just a train whistle away from King Street Station, and much more pleasant.
Viewed from afar, King Street Station isn’t all that bad. The 1906 building, with its 12-story clock tower, is fairly impressive — sort of the non-churchgoing twin to the Campanile di San Marco in Venice. Viva, Italia! But a quick check around the neighborhood flattens that fantasy faster than a Seattle sports team leaving town. With Seahawks Stadium and Safeco Field a pigskin toss and baseball lob away, I knew there was little chance of spotting Sophia Loren or Marcello Mastroianni lurking around the station anytime soon.
Sadly, the train station is much less inviting inside, with the only Italian connection being a few wayward birds hopping and flying about. And even though the historic building’s design is often referred to as Railroad Italiante, don’t expect to be served the perfect cappuccino by a handsome waiter garbed in black and white. If you want something to sip or nosh on, you’ll have to put your greenbacks into a non-speaking vending machine.
King Street Station stands in stark contrast to Portland’s Union Station, located in Portland’s Old Town/Chinatown. It opened in 1896 and boasts an impressive 150-foot-tall clock tower described as Romanesque. Atop the tower is the neon Go By Train sign that was added to the tower sometime after World War II.
Union Station was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975 and has been renovated since being taken over by the Portland Development Commission in 1987, as part of the Downtown Waterfront Urban Renewal Area. Today it’s comfortable, clean, and spacious with plenty of traveler amenities. Also housed in the station is Wilf’s, a cozy restaurant and jazz bar.
But here I am back at Seattle’s King Street Station, where dozens of travelers are lined up for morning trains headed north and south. Strollers, bicycles, and yoga mats make up the motley mix while a mother says a tearful goodbye to her son and others are hugging their smart phones, laptops, and e-book readers. Outside of the waiting passengers and on-duty Amtrak staff, the only other human activity is a service guy filling up an ATM located next to an uninviting women’s room. No thanks.
The good news for Seattle rail travelers is that King Street Station is perking up, albeit slowly. Cosmetic restoration started on the building in 2003, and the City of Seattle purchased the station from BNSF Railway five years later. In 2010, the U.S. Transportation Department awarded the King Street Station Restoration project $18.2 million, from $2.4 billion in high-speed intercity passenger rail-service funding.
The funds will complete seismic regrades and interior restoration of the station. This spring, a tree-lined plaza on Jackson Street is scheduled to open, replacing a parking lot. Details about the King Street Station Restoration may be found on the Seattle Department of Transportation’s website.
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Comments:
Posted Tue, Apr 5, 10:11 a.m. Inappropriate
Patience, Ms. Frause. When upgrades and renovations are complete, King Street Station will be spectacular. Taking nothing away from Portland's Union Station - which I visit two or three times a year - King Street, with its fantastic location and new tree-lined courtyard, will be a showpiece and a stunning way to welcome travelers to the city.
Posted Tue, Apr 5, 10:36 a.m. Inappropriate
Yes, I'm being patient! Vancouver BC's Pacific Central Station also gets high marks; it just seems that Seattle is always a bit behind the other two cities in the transportation department.
Posted Tue, Apr 5, 12:55 p.m. Inappropriate
So you ambled through the Seattle Amtrak station and somehow missed the filthy restrooms (grunge would be too polite), or the beggar with the falling-down and feces-ridden pants who daily harasses passengers, while the employees stand around and ignore him?
You should visit more often. Seattle's Amtrak station is a disgrace, and is an incredibly woeful welcoming place to the city. The changes cannot happen soon enough, but these cosmetics need to be accompanied by some serious on-going effort to improve the atmosphere.
Posted Tue, Apr 5, 1:06 p.m. Inappropriate
As Stuffwhitepeoplelike.com says, White People (like you, Sue) want the place they live to be Europe...
Posted Tue, Apr 5, 9:41 p.m. Inappropriate
A really nice piece Sue, although when you’re dealing with railroad stations it’s always good to look into the historical files. I would suggest that three other regional station buildings are worth mention for their public spaces.
The best waiting room/concourse in Seattle is in Union Station, across the street from King Street Station and now the home of Sound Transit. Union Station was built to serve the trains of the Milwaukee Road and the Union Pacific, and was in use until UP discontinued passenger train service in 1971. The tracks that once served the station have been covered over with office buildings. The concourse is a classical arched vault, much grander than King Street’s Corinthian columned box (which was sheathed with acoustical tiles for many years). It’s a great room and popular for weddings and parties.
Another station worth mentioning is north of the border. The current Pacific Central Station in Vancouver is actually the old Canadian National station. From there it’s a bit of a hike to downtown or Gastown. Much closer to downtown, the former Canadian Pacific station on the waterfront was once the sight of multiple intercity train departures daily but is now the home to the Seabus, Sky Train, and West Coast Express commuter train service. The Waterfront Station is a grand neoclassical monument to the greatness of Canada.
Tacoma Union Station served Great Northern, Northern Pacific, Milwaukee Road, and Union Pacific trains. The building has been re-purposed as the Federal Courthouse, although the vaulted station concourse is available for parties. It's good that the building and the concourse were preserved, but railroad passengers now have to use a bus station-style building not close to anything and few blocks away from light rail.
Per orino’s snarky comment, I think people “like us” don’t want to live in Europe, we want the US to be more like it used to be, when there was some pride in public spaces.
Posted Wed, Apr 6, 12:24 a.m. Inappropriate
I'm guessing the Portland Union Station clocktower was victim of a typo: the tower is 150 feet tall. Also, though there is some debate in architectural circles, it is generally considered to be Richardson Romanesque.
While King Street is, well, a mess, it is slowly limping towards improvement. Kudos to everyone involved in it's rehab, and I look forward to the day when it looks (almost) as spectacular as my hometown station does.
Posted Wed, Apr 6, 11:47 a.m. Inappropriate
Of all the Northwest train stations, Tacoma's Union Station is certainly the nicest and most beautiful (Portland comes in second). Unfortunately, it's no longer a train station. Amtrak now sets out from a hunkering little brick building near the Tideflats that makes a Trailways bus terminal look like a palace. Seattle would be well advised not to lose King Street Station as a functioning train terminal.
Posted Wed, Apr 6, 4:58 p.m. Inappropriate
Thanks for all the station input, good stuff. Also the heads up on the tower typo. As far as "White People" like me wanting the place I live to be Europe, that's a pretty silly stone to throw. Plus, I lived in Europe for a year back in the '70s, and am quite happy to call Whidbey Island home for the past 35 years. Il est beau, même quand il pleut!
Posted Wed, Apr 6, 8:50 p.m. Inappropriate
@alexander_craghead: The tower height has now been fixed. Thanks for the alert.