Glen Eden's station building was completed in February 1880 as a simple rectangular-plan building with a pitched roof, subsequently altered to a ridged roof with gable ends. Verandahs were added to each frontage in 1929 and 1940, giving the building its current form. The second and later verandah faced what was then the road frontage onto Waikumete Road, in preparation for a branch line that did not eventuate. The station building narrowly escaped removal in 1995, when its sale was overturned following the discovery that
New Zealand Railways Corporation had donated the building to the Glen Eden Borough Council in 1983. The Glen Eden Railway Station Restoration Trust (Incorporated) was subsequently formed, purchased the building from the council, and began restoration work in 1999. On 7 October 2001, the trust relocated the restored station building from its original location on the eastern side of the railway corridor, adjacent to Waikumete Cemetery, across the corridor and approximately 200 metres south to its current site on West Coast Road. The building was rotated through 180 degrees to face the correct frontage onto the railway platform as originally built. Ownership of the building was transferred from the trust to the former
Waitakere City Council in 2006. The trust currently holds a community lease from the
Waitākere Ranges Local Board, including permission to sublease the building as a restaurant/cafe. Proceeds from the sublease support the trust's maintenance of the building in line with its New Zealand Historic Places Trust classification. Glen Eden station's signal box, located near the original station building site off Waikumete Road, was sold in the 1970s and relocated to Muriwai. ==Services==