This gallery contains 8 photos.
This gallery contains 8 photos.

Going up or coming down? Bridge and viaduct construction was an integral part of the Union Terminal construction project
Going up or coming down? Over the last 70+ years, the landmark has been the subject of wonder, awe and unfortunately from time to time, of thoughts to tear it down and reclaim the land for other uses.
The Cincinnati Union Terminal building has had a couple of lives– in service of trains, as a shopping mall and now as the Cincinnati Museum Center.
The construction of the Terminal was a one time thing in our history. Never before or again will opportunity, need, art and function come together to shape our surroundings.
Could we build a stadium for $41,000,000.00? An airport?
As one railroad club member is fond of saying, maybe a lane of highway. Even if we had put away that money in the 1920′s with inflation and interest, the cost of building a landmark like the Cincinnati Union Terminal could not be repeated.
Capturing the history of the building, rail history and the effect this had on Cincinnati is a legacy we need to capture and share–to preserve our memories for our children before they fade…
Please consider how you can help, by sharing memories here in the comments sections, by volunteering or donating.
Thanks~!
Back when I was but a wee pup, we did project management the hard way – with Microsoft Project! Printing out a gantt chart took many, many minutes. Back in the day of Union Terminal’s construction, the architects drew their gantt charts by hand, just like their blueprints.
The construction project was so controlled and disciplined, they even had a project font created specifically for blueprints and planning. The planners even created an ‘expected mortality’ chart to estimate the loss of life during construction (which we also hear was extremely minimal, thank goodness).
Take that, six sigma!
More planning and construction photos can be seen in the galleries. Please feel free to look around, comment and ask questions. Our club experts are standing by…

Cincinnati Union Terminal Company executives, architects and contractors
Back in the days of the Terminal planning and construction, men wore suits, people smoked at meetings and donuts were conspicuously missing from the center of the room. These were the executives who made the decisions that shaped the building and grounds. More of these photos can be seen in the galleries. Click here to view images from the recently posted volume 11 from the Gibson Yungblut collection.
Paper paper everywhere – nowadays tickets are printed on home computers and calendars are kept handy on our smartphones. Back in the heyday of train travel, a lot of paper was used– from timetables to tickets, signage to menus and much more. Today these vintage pieces of paper are called ephemera and some are highly collectable.
Hidden in the Cincinnati Railroad Club’s collection are some really neat examples of marketing materials, calendars and passageway tickets. While some items are on display in the Club’s museum space in Tower A of the Cincinnati Museum Center, more can be found in this new gallery…
Click here to see the gallery – more items will appear as we catalog and scan, so check back often!