The railroad was headquartered in
Indianapolis, Indiana, in the Chesapeake Building at 105 South
Meridian Street. The building was constructed for the railroad in 1929 and was also known as the Big Four Building. In 1996, this multi-story structure became a
Hampton Inn hotel. Between 1904 and 1908 the railroad constructed a repair shop for steam locomotives and for passenger and freight cars in
Beech Grove, Indiana.
Amtrak purchased the facility, now known as the
Beech Grove Shops, from the bankrupt Penn Central in 1975. The railroad operated a
terminal at
Bellefontaine, Ohio, that included the largest
roundhouse in use at that time between
New York City and
St. Louis, Missouri. Conrail closed the Bellefontaine terminal in 1983, and its roundhouse was dismantled. A large
yard facility known as the Big Four Yards is located in
Avon, Indiana, along the line's tracks, now owned and operated by CSX. In 1895, the railroad acquired what became known as the
Big Four Bridge across the
Ohio River at
Louisville, Kentucky, thereby giving it access to that city. Use of the bridge for railroad purposes ceased by 1968, and it sat abandoned until work began by 2006 to convert it to use by pedestrians and bicyclists. ==See also==