Details for Neighborhood Surveys

Atlas Number 3002010207

Data

Serial Number NRS82-23053
County Tarrant
City/Rural Fort Worth
Name Texas and Pacific Railway Terminal and Office Building
Address 221 West Lancaster Avenue
Owner Merchants Terminal Joint Venture
Owner Address 810 Houston Street Ft. Worth, TX 76102
Block/Lot John Childress Survey, Ab 250, >> cont .
USGS Quad Number 3297-424
Site Number N59
UTM
Date: Factual 1930-31
Date: Estimated
Architect/Builder Wyatt C. Hedrick
Contractor P.O.B. Montgomery
Style/Type Art Deco
Original Use Railroad Passenger Terminal and Office Building
Present Use Terminal unused, offices partially used
Description A large railroad terminal and office building, rectangular in plan, with 3-part vertical composition, high 2 story base, 8 story shaft and 2 story capital. Red granite and limestone base, yellow brick shaft and capital. Recessed industrial sash windows panels at base with aluminum and marble spandrel panels. Windows above rectangular double hung with recessed spandrel panels. End bays project forward and up, terminating in octagonal towers, two on each end. Aluminum marquees. Elaborate art deco ornament, including interior. 1story rear addition.
Present Condition Good, appears unaltered
Significance The Texas and Pacific Railroad played a central role in Fort Worth's development, from the establishment of the city's first rail line in 1876 to the peak years of train service during World War II. Fort Worth's growth in the oil-boom years of the 1920's outstripped its transportation facilities. Beginning in 1928, Texas and Pacific President John L. Lancaster met with the Fort Worth City Council, under the leadership of Mayor William Bryce, to address the problem. In June of 1929, Lancaster and Bryce announced an ambitious joint plan in which the railroad and the city would in essence reconstruct the downtown rail >> cont .
Relationship to Site: Moved No
Relationship to Site: Moving Date
Relationship to Site: Original Location Yes
Relationship to Site: Describe Adjacent to railroad tracks, cut >> cont .
Bibliography National Register application
Informant
Recorder Woody Minor
Date 09-18-83
Designations: TNRIS No.
Designations: THC Code Number
Designations: RTHL Yes
Designations: HABS No
Designations: HABS Number
Designations: NR Individual Yes
Designations: NR Historic District No
Designations: NR Thematic No
Designations: NR Multiple Resource No
Designations: NR Filename
Designations: Other
Photo Data: B&W 4x5's 10
Photo Data: Slides Yes
Photo Data: 35mm Negatives No
Continuation >>LGLDESCRPT>> T and Preservation Tract 451 >>SIGNIFICNS>> and road system. The T & P proposed to expend $3,000,000 to construct new passenger and freight terminals. The city would spend a like amount for the construction of a network of street underpasses to accommodate relocated tracks; a municipal bond election secured these funds. The Fort Worth architectural firm of Wyatt C. Hedrick received the commissions for the terminal buildings. Hedrick was a major architect of his day who was involved in the design of numerous important buildings in Fort Worth and Texas. The chief designer for the terminal building was H.P. Koeppe; chief engineer was P.M. Geren. Bids were advertised for in early 1930 and contracts awarded in April. Total bids amounted to $1,342,899 for the passenger terminal and $1,720,000 for the freight terminal buildings. P. O'b. Montgomery of Dallas was the general contractor. Work commenced that summer. The passenger terminal opened formally on November 2,1931, with a gala Rail-Banquet. The freight buildings were completed presumably about the same time. The passenger terminal followed the precedent of earlier British and American train stations, with an office block rising above the station. It is of reinforced concrete and steel-frame construction, clad in yellow-buff brick, with polished red granite and limestone base and limestone trim. In plan, it is a rectangle measuring approximately 70 feet by 222 feet. The building's design incorporates a three-part vertical composition. From the high ground floor with mezzanine base rises a ten-story shaft, the top two stories of which are slightly recessed. Major frieze bands of carved limestone are set above the base and eighth story and at the cornice. Projecting end bays at each corner of the building step back at the eight story and terminate above the roof level in peaked octagonal towers. Recessed spandrel panels and continuous piers emphasize the impression of verticality. The high ground floor, lit by panels of small-paned windows, is comprised primarily of waiting rooms, restaurant, and an elevator lobby, all richly finished. Interior and exterior ornament exhibits abstract geometric and plant motifs in the Art Deco style. Train sheds and a trucking platform were built at the same time. The freight terminal is situated west of the passenger terminal building, across Jennings Avenue. It consists of two buildings. The in-freight warehouse is an enormous 8-story masonry block measuring 100 feet by 600 feet, of reinforced concrete and steel-frame construction, clad in yellow buff brick with limestone trim. As with the passenger terminal building, projecting end bays terminate in octagonal towers; unlike the former, these are squat and elongated, with flat tops. Each long facade is divided into five bays by paired piers, with minor piers and recessed spandrel panels in each bay accentuating the verticality suggested by the corner towers. Continuous loading docks covered by metal canopies extend along the long sides. Ornament is restricted primarily to patterned red brick friezes above the ground floor, similar frieze panels along the cornice, and limestone coping along parapets. The out-freight warehouse, with similar materials and trim, is a long one story structure terminated by a two story block at each end. It is situated behind the larger structure. The dominance of the in-freight warehouse suggests Fort Worth's importance as an importer of goods for local distribution. The region's primary export items-oil, meat and grain-generally were shipped via separate rail facilities. The complex of buildings is an architecturally impressive monument to the importance of the railroad in Fort Worth's development. However, the automobile has dominated passenger travel since the 1950's; train service to the passenger terminal ceased in 1967. The building was sold by the Texas and Pacific Railroad in 1977, and today is occupied by federal and private offices. Similarly, trucks haul most freight today, and the freight terminal buildings are under-used. The location of the elevated I-30 freeway next to the building's visually severing them from downtown, is symbolic of the ascendancy and dominance of the new mode of transportation. In 1978, all three structures were placed on the National Register of Historic Places, and in 1980 the passenger terminal building was designated a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark. >>RELATDESCR>> off from downtown by elevated freeway.

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