Photographic History of Buffalo Central Terminal (1929--present)
By John M. Hague III, Thomas A. Fedele and Michael Fedele
Originally published in the Fourth Quarter 1997 issue of Central Highlight
Buffalo Central Terminal, put in service in 1929 -- when Buffalo was second
only to Chicago as a U.S rail center -- was the culmination of decades of railroad
growth and evolution in western New York. Community planning in the 1920s had
considered several other centralized station sites in Buffalo. The site chosen
was adjacent to the Water Level Route -- as required by the magnitude of NY
Central operations in the 1920s.
The Great Depression started only a few months after inauguration of the "Terminal"
(a misnomer for BCT because much traffic from New York, Boston, and Albany on Line
East continued through to Line West, Cleveland and Chicago -- as most eastbound traffic
continued through.) The economy continued to deteriorate and for the next decade
curtailed the station's expected heavy usage -- until the crisis of World War II.
Then the ten-building station complex, no longer overbuilt, gave its best service
for five years, facilitating the intensive and efficient transportation of personnel
and materiel that allowed the Niagara Frontier region to contribute its great economic
strength toward U.S. victory in the last 'just" war.
Decades of decline and eventual abandonment followed the disappearance of war-related
travel after the 1946 return of military personnel. The draconian nationwide reduction
in rail passenger travel concurrent with the massive growth of national highway and
air-transportation systems probably made Buffalo Central Terminal's fifty-year life
cycle "from dedication to dethronement" (Cousins) inevitable. Its distance
from regional business centers and airports and its massive space, far in excess
of Amtrak's needs, also contributed to its demise.
Tony Fedele's "Central Terminal Plaza" project attempted to forestall the
inevitable, and gave the facility an extra decade of community presence through limited
business service before his eventual eviction from the terminal building through
a tax sale. Tony then occupied the adjacent Railway Express Agency building for a
few more years. Tony died May 24, 1995. Subsequent owners continued (or failed to
prevent) the stripping of artifacts and parts such as copper flashing. Finally, total
abandonment -- with minimal protection from intruders -- resulted in the current
state of extreme deterioration.
Tony passed on to his son Thomas A. Fedele and grandson, Michael (also of Buffalo)
a collection of Fellheimer & Wagner Architects' photos taken at the time
of completion in 1929. The few photos and architects' drawings presented here,
69 years later, show the station's original New York Central-caliber magnificence.
Other photos from the next thirty years, plus construction documents and other
memorabilia, were also saved. This article attempts to survey the nature and
the history of the facility -- best described by articles in Railway Age
(1929) (Footnote 24) and Trains (1985) (Footnote 2). The photos shown
here record its first-rank architectural quality.
Introduction
The former Buffalo NY Central Terminal complex has been severely damaged
and degraded -- in the absence of building security from either physical barriers,
e.g., fences and window covers, or guards -- by the depredations of scavengers
and vandals, plus snow and water damage -- over the decades. Attempts at adaptive
reuse of the facility have failed since the days of Tony Fedele's noble endeavors
with his "Central Terminal Plaza" project, during which a limited
but stabilizing commercial presence kept conditions on an even keel for about
ten years -- in spite of the departure of Amtrak and Conrail.
Cincinnati Union Terminal (C.U.T.) -- the next project designed by B.C.T.'s
architects Alfred Fellheimer and Steward Wagner -- would ideally have provided
Buffalo's model for automotive-era adaptive reuse. C.U.T. has been totally renovated
since 1989, and is used by two museums and a movie theatre as well as by Amtrak
and, in Tower "A" (overlooking Queensgate Yard) by the Cincinnati
Railroad Club. Cincinnati is called the "Queen City" (of the Ohio
River Valley) and has earned the name with its preservation of C.U.T -- which
puts Buffalo, "Queen City of the Lakes," to shame with its mismanagement
by total neglect of Buffalo Central Terminal.
As a Buffalo area resident from 1969 to '89, a railfan and Amtrak traveler,
I became quite familiar with Central Terminal. During Tony Fedele's ownership
of the complex in 1985, I considered the possibility of renting office space
in the tower, and later conducted heating-energy efficiency and wood-fuel feasibility
studies of the remaining buildings in the complex (terminal and office tower,
post office, five-story mail-and-baggage building, and REA building) under the
sponsorship of the NY State Energy Office's "E.A.S.I" (Energy Advisory
Service to Industry) program. [The train concourse and passenger platforms,
on Conrail property, had been severed from the terminal, c. 1982, to allow high
freight cars to pass on the N.Y.C. "Belt Line" trackage.]
The energy analyses (Footnotes 18--19) included determination of the surface
areas -- totaling 46,500 square meters (500,000 square feet) -- and thermal
conductivities of walls, windows, doors, and roof of each building, heat-loss
calculations, and the writing of reports recommending methods of reducing heat
costs. Since the "Central Terminal Plaza" project had few businesses
participating, financial shortfalls led to shutoff of gas to the boiler -- preventing
both centralized heating and repair of the many broken windows. Thus my energy
reports were moot and the only heat source was localized portable heaters in
Tony's office area inside the main entrance and in his south--facing apartment
on the fourth floor of the tower -- which also overlooked the main passenger
concourse.
Vandals and intruders were a continuing problem, not infrequently setting fires
in the R.E.A building, stealing door fixtures and metal parts in the tower,
removing copper flashing from roof junctions, and breaking windows. Not even
Tony's German Shepherd, Moose, who guarded the main building, was able to prevent
all intruders. (During an early visit I started to open the door before Tony
answered my knock, and Moose almost earned another notch on his collar.) Near
the end of his ownership, before the tax sale to Tom Telesco, Tony's apartment
(which included an extensive kitchen where he prepared meals highlighted by
pasta sauce from his special recipe) was completely vandalized while he was
away from the building. Tony and I shared what he called "Central Terminal
Fever" -- but it was a losing battle against weather and associated deterioration,
vandalism, and insufficient income. Nonetheless, there were occasional successful
events such as neighborhood polka parties, Dyngus Day celebrations (customary
in the surrounding Polish neighborhood after Easter), boxing and hockey tournaments
(which led to a plan to reopen the restaurant as "The Slap Shot"),
one Engineers' Week program, etc. Marge Quinlan's laudable "Historic Central
Terminal" project Footnote 23 -- started in 1984 and renamed "Friends
of Central Terminal Plaza" -- and Tony's attempts to rent business space
weren't successful because of various factors including location, which was
very similar to Cincinnati in terms of distance from downtown, distance from
expressways, and a depressed local economy.
Having moved to the Cincinnati area in mid-1989 -- therefore becoming familiar
with Cincinnati Union Terminal, another Fellheimer and Wagner masterpiece (opened
in 1933) which was also vacant and within a few years was totally restored --
I am shocked and saddened by the contrast between C. U. T.'s renovated magnificence
and B.C.T.'s desolation, as shown in the Buffalo News article of 21 June
1996 and confirmed by recent site visits.
Although the ultimate fate of the building(s) may be beyond the scope of available
resources, eventual ownership and management by the Polish Community Center
and Central Terminal Restoration Corporation (acquisition in process) offer
some hope. It would be insane for cash--short local governments to commit millions
of dollars to demolition of this National Register masterpiece! ADAPTIVE REUSE
is the order of the day, as in Cincinnati. It seems that the B.C.T. tower would,
after updating of the obsolete 25-hertz powered elevators and restoration of
the windows, roofs, etc., be an ideal site for offices or living space. Years
ago, a proposal was made to move the Erie County Social Services Department
offices to the tower, but nothing came of that . . . But the building could
be reused for the public good (even though most of its Art Deco features are
gone) -- as shown by recent (1996) comprehensive studies by a consortium of
architects and engineers (Footnote 20).
This article was prepared by John Maxfield Hague, P.E (N.Y.C.S.H.S # 4072), with valuable assistance from, and thanks to, Tom and Michael Fedele (the son and grandson of Tony Fedele, to whom this article is dedicated), Marge Quinlan (a leader of the "Friends of Central Terminal Plaza"), A. Scott Field (now working on adaptive reuse of the complex), John Conlin, et al.