(
Pacific Electric),
Central Station (
Southern Pacific),
Salt Lake Station, (
Union Pacific),
La Grande Station (
Santa Fe) The city council of Los Angeles had desired since the 1910s to construct a
union station to replace the existing three terminal stations in Los Angeles: the
Santa Fe's
La Grande Station, the
Southern Pacific's
Central Station, and the
Union Pacific's
Salt Lake Station. As the proposed station would be built and owned by the city and open to all prospective railroads, it threatened to break these three railroads' control over rail traffic into and out of the city. Their opposition led to a series of legal cases that were still not resolved by 1925, when the railroads offered a compromise solution. The Union Pacific's Salt Lake Station had burned down in 1924, forcing it to rent space in the Southern Pacific's Central Station. The railroads proposed to make this arrangement permanent, reducing the number of terminals to two, while also constructing a large network of
elevated tracks at their own expense, to be used by them and the
Pacific Electric. Not only would the new electrified tracks link the two terminals, but they would eliminate
street running on some of the busiest streets in Los Angeles. The railroads' proposal immediately generated public controversy for and against the proposal, and in February 1926 the council agreed to place a non-binding question on the ballot asking voters whether they were in favor of the city council's union station proposal or the railroads' elevated railway plan. Proposition 8 asked "Shall a Union Railway Passenger Terminal for all steam railroads be established in the City of Los Angeles?", while Proposition 9 asked whether the proposed station should be built in Los Angeles Plaza. The issue became extremely heated, with both sides fiercely arguing their point. Elevated railway proponents, such as the
Los Angeles Examiner and the Greater Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, pointed to the safety benefits of the elimination of grade crossings and the benefits to businesses of reduced traffic congestion, as well as claiming that the proposed union station site would cause heavy road congestion. Union station proponents, such as the
Los Angeles Times and many homeowner associations, claimed that elevated railways harmed property values, made streets dangerously dark, produced unacceptable levels of noise, and were less safe than other forms of railroad. As the Los Angeles Plaza was near Los Angeles'
original Chinatown, the debate took on racial connotations as well, with the
Examiner claiming that being near Chinatown would mean that visitors to the city would receive a bad first impression, and the
Times countering by arguing that the construction of the station would allow for urban renewal that would "spell the passing of Chinatown". During the construction process of Union Station, archaeological remains from the
Tongva village of
Yaanga were uncovered. Researcher Joan Brown summarized this in 1992:Previous archaeological studies conducted at and near Union Station indicate that buried intact prehistoric and historic deposits exist in-situ beneath and in the vicinity of Union Station. The extent of the archaeological deposits is unknown at this time. Union Station was constructed on three to twenty feet of fill dirt placed over the original Los Angeles Chinatown. Chinatown, in turn, had been built over the remains of an Indian village, tentatively identified as the village of Yangna. took over from
La Grande Station which had suffered major damage in the
1933 Long Beach earthquake and
Central Station, which had itself replaced the
Arcade Depot in 1914. Passenger service was provided by the
Santa Fe,
Southern Pacific, and
Union Pacific, as well as local lines of the
Pacific Electric Railway and
Los Angeles Railway (LARy). The famed
Super Chief luxury train carried Hollywood stars and others to
Chicago and thence the East Coast. Union Station saw heavy use during
World War II, but later saw declining patronage due to policy shifts on the state and federal levels promoting the use of air travel and automobiles over passenger rail. In 1948, the Santa Fe's
Super Chief lost its brakes coming into the station, smashed through a steel bumper and concrete wall, and stopped with one third of the front of the locomotive dangling over Aliso St. No one was killed or injured, but the engineer lost his job. combined
Super Chief/El Capitan at the station in 1966 The station was designated as a Los Angeles Historic–Cultural Monument No. 101 on August 2, 1972, and placed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1980. The first commuter rail service to Union Station was the short-lived
CalTrain that began operating on October 18, 1982, between Los Angeles and
Oxnard. The service faced economic and political problems from the start and was suspended in March 1983. The next attempt at commuter rail came in 1990 with the launch of the
Amtrak-operated
Orange County Commuter. The once-daily round-trip served stations between Los Angeles and
San Juan Capistrano. In December 1989, the Santa Fe Pacific Realty Co purchased Southern Pacific's shareholding in the station, followed in January 1990 by Union Pacific's 22% and Santa Fe's 34%.
Metrolink commuter rail service began on October 26, 1992, with Union Station as the terminus for the
San Bernardino Line, the Santa Clarita Line (later renamed the
Antelope Valley Line) and the
Ventura County Line. In January 1993, Metro's
Red Line subway began service to the station, followed by Metrolink's
Riverside Line in June. The
Orange County Commuter train was discontinued on March 28, 1994, and replaced by Metrolink's
Orange County Line. In May 2002, Metrolink added additional service to stations in Orange and Riverside counties with the opening of the 91 Line (now the
91/Perris Valley Line.) Light rail service arrived at Union Station on July 26, 2003, when Metro's
Gold Line began operating to Pasadena from tracks 1 and 2. The line was expanded south over US 101 in November 2009 with the opening of the Gold Line Eastside Extension. In February 2011, the board of Los Angeles Metro approved the purchase of Union Station from Prologis and
Catellus Development (a descendant of the Santa Fe and Southern Pacific railroads) for $75 million. The deal was closed on April 14, 2011. Since taking over ownership of the station, Metro has focused on increasing services for passengers at the station. One of the most noticeable changes is the addition of several retail and dining businesses to the concourse. Amtrak opened a Metropolitan Lounge at Union Station on September 23, 2013. The lounge is open to Amtrak passengers traveling in sleeping car accommodations as well as some
Amtrak Guest Rewards members (Select Plus and Select Executive levels only). The lounge features a staffed ticket counter, complimentary refreshments, complimentary
Wi-Fi, and a conference room. Passengers using the Metropolitan Lounge receive priority boarding. Metro plans to install
Bluetooth beacons in Union Station to enable sending
text messages to travelers'
smartphones. On March 15, 2021, it was announced that the station would serve as a joint venue of the
93rd Academy Awards along with the
Dolby Theatre due to the
impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on cinema. The ceremony was criticized for limiting access to the station and its
COVID-19 testing site due to security measures mandated by the academy. On October 19, 2022, Greyhound moved its primary Los Angeles station to the Patsaouras Transit Plaza at Union Station. == Architecture ==