Grand Forks station (Northern Pacific Railway) explained

Northern Pacific Depot and Freight House
Location:202 N. 3rd St., Grand Forks, North Dakota
Coordinates:47.9269°N -97.0328°W
Built:1929
Architecture:Tudor Revival
Added:October 26, 1982
Area:less than
Mpsub:Downtown Grand Forks MRA
Refnum:82001333

Grand Forks station is a property in Grand Forks, North Dakota, United States, that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 as the Northern Pacific Depot and Freight House. It was used both as a passenger station and a freight warehouse/depot by the Northern Pacific Railway.

The station was built in 1929 and includes Tudor Revival architecture. The listing was for an area of less than one acre with just one contributing building.

The listing is described in its North Dakota Cultural Resources Survey document.[1] It is one of two "outstanding" buildings, both one story, that "represent the Tudor Revival", within the Downtown Grand Forks area whose historic resources were surveyed in 1981; the Lyons Garage is the other. Both are "done in polychrome brick of yellow and red".[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=82001333}} North Dakota Cultural Resources Survey: Northern Pacific Depot and Freight House ]. C. Kudzia Norene . Joe Roberts . Gary Hendricksen . September 1981 . National Park Service. and
  2. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=64000472}} National Register of Historic Places: Downtown Grand Forks MRA ]. Norene Roberts . Joe Roberts . amp . November 30, 1981 . National Park Service. 4.