Milwaukee Intermodal Station Explained

Milwaukee Intermodal Station
Style:Amtrak
Address:433 West Saint Paul Avenue
Borough:Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Country:United States
Coordinates:43.0342°N -87.9172°W
Owned:Wisconsin Department of Transportation
Operator:Amtrak
Line:CPKC Watertown/C&M Subdivisions
Platforms:2 island and 1 side platform
Tracks:5
Bus Stands:9
Connections:Milwaukee Streetcar
Milwaukee County Transit System

BlueLine, 12, 31, 34, 57

Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Custom:
Shape:none
Line:none
Marker:rail
Marker-Color:
  1. 000
Zoom:15
Parking:425 long term spaces
Bicycle:Bublr Bikes bike-share
Outdoor bicycle parking
Accessible:Yes
Iata:ZML
Opened:1965
Rebuilt:2007
Former:Milwaukee Union Station (1965–2007)
Other Services Header:Former services
Other Services Collapsible:yes

Milwaukee Intermodal Station is an intercity bus and train station in downtown Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Amtrak service at Milwaukee includes the daily Empire Builder, the daily Borealis, and the six daily Hiawatha Service round trips. It is Amtrak's 18th-busiest station nationwide, and the second-busiest in the Midwest, behind only Chicago Union Station.[1] The station is served by bus companies Coach USA - Wisconsin Coach Lines (regional and intercity services), Greyhound Lines, Jefferson Lines, Indian Trails, Lamers, Badger Bus, Tornado Bus Company, and Megabus. It is also the western terminus of the M-Line service of The Hop streetcar.

The Wisconsin Department of Transportation owns the station and platforms. The DOT's Statewide Traffic Operations Center is on the 3rd floor of the station. The station has 2 island platforms and 1 side platform, which serve the two main tracks of the Canadian Pacific Kansas City C&M Subdivision plus three platform sidings.

History

The station opened on August 3, 1965, as Milwaukee Union Station. Operated by the Milwaukee Road, it replaced their previous Everett Street Depot. The depot was built on West St. Paul Avenue in a modernistic style that proved unpopular quickly after it was erected. The Chicago and North Western Railroad closed their Milwaukee station (Lake Front Depot) and moved their passenger operations to the new Milwaukee Road depot in 1966. Following the formation of Amtrak in 1971, the Chicago and North Western withdrew all of its intercity trains and commuter service from the station. The Canadian Pacific Railway (through its Soo Line Railroad subsidiary) acquired the trackage within the train shed when it bought the remnants of the Milwaukee Road in 1986. CP merged with the Kansas City Southern Railway on April 14, 2023 to form Canadian Pacific Kansas City Limited.

In November 2007, the facility was renamed the Milwaukee Intermodal Station following a $16.9 million renovation. The new facility included a larger waiting area with a glass atrium and improved space for Amtrak ticketing, as well as facilities for intercity buses (to accommodate Greyhound service after it relocated from its former location at 7th and Michigan), a restaurant, and retail space.[2] In 2016, the Wisconsin Department of Transportation completed a rebuild of the train shed and platform to meet federal accessible standards.[3]

The Hop streetcar service began on November 2, 2018, with a stop on Vel R. Phillips Avenue just northeast of the station.

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://media.amtrak.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Amtrak-Corporate-Profile_FY2018_Pub-March-1-2019.pdf Amtrak national fact sheet FY2018
  2. http://media.www.marquettetribune.org/media/storage/paper1130/news/2007/11/13/News/Amtrak.Greyhound.Now.At.Same.Location-3096743.shtml Amtrak, Greyhound now at same location
  3. Web site: Jannene . Jeramey . Eyes on Milwaukee: New $22 Million Rail Concourse Opens . 2022-11-18 . Urban Milwaukee . en.