Tower City Center

Tower City Center is a large mixed-use facility in Downtown Cleveland, Ohio, on its Public Square. The facility is composed of a number of interconnected office buildings, including Terminal Tower, the Skylight Park mixed-use shopping center, Jack Cleveland Casino, Renaissance Cleveland Hotel, Chase Financial Plaza, and Tower City station, the main hub of Cleveland's four RTA Rapid Transit lines.

Tower City Center
View from Public Square
General information
Location230 West Huron Road,
Cleveland, Ohio
Coordinates41°29′52″N 81°41′39″W
History
OpenedJune 29, 1930 (1930-06-29) (Terminal)
ClosedJanuary 14, 1977 (1977-01-14) (Terminal)
Previous namesCleveland Union Terminal
Former services
Preceding station Erie Railroad Following station
Terminus Cleveland – Youngstown East 55th
toward Youngstown
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Toledo
toward Chicago
Lake Shore Erie
Preceding station New York Central Railroad Following station
Linndale
toward Chicago
Main Line East Cleveland
toward New York
Linndale
toward Cincinnati
CincinnatiCleveland Terminus
Linndale
toward St. Louis
Big Four Route
Main Line
Preceding station Nickel Plate Road Following station
Rocky River
toward Chicago
Main Line East Cleveland
toward Buffalo
Rocky River
toward St. Louis
ClevelandSt. Louis Terminus
Preceding station Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Following station
Terminus Cleveland Akron Wheeling
1940s–1962
Willow
toward Wheeling
Cleveland Sterling Wheeling
1934–1940s
South Brooklyn
toward Wheeling
Cleveland Akron – Valley Junction
1934–1940s
Brooklyn
toward Valley Junction
Union Terminal Group
ArchitectGraham, Anderson, Probst & White; Walker & Weeks
Architectural styleBeaux-Arts, Art Deco
Websitetowercitycenter.com
NRHP reference No.76001405[1]
Added to NRHPMarch 17, 1976
Inside the main shopping concourse in 2023

The structure was built in 1929 as Cleveland Union Terminal. On March 17, 1976, the complex was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

History

Rail terminal

The building complex was originally commissioned by the Van Sweringen brothers, prominent local railroad moguls and real estate developers. The center of the complex was Cleveland Union Terminal (CUT), a terminal for all trains coming into Cleveland via the various railroad lines in a concept similar to Grand Central Terminal in New York City.[2]

When Cleveland Union Terminal was built, the train station allocated the northern set of tracks for interurban or rapid transit service and the southern set of tracks for inter-city rail service. The portion of the station above the interurban tracks was called the Traction Concourse and the portion above the intercity train tracks was called the Steam Concourse. The Van Sweringen brothers envisioned a network of interurban lines extending from the CUT in all directions. They even acquired right-of-way for some of the lines.

The complex was designed by the firm of Graham, Anderson, Probst & White. Site preparation began in 1922, and approximately 2,200 buildings were demolished. Construction began in 1926, and structural work was completed by 1927. At the time, it was the second-largest excavation project in the world after the Panama Canal. The Terminal Tower opened to its first tenants in 1928. From its completion until 1964, the Terminal Tower was the tallest building in North America outside of New York City. Three other office buildings, the Medical Arts Building, Builders Exchange Building, and Midland Building, were built in addition to the Terminal Tower. The three Art Deco buildings are collectively known as the Landmark Office Towers Complex and were completed in 1929. In addition to the new buildings, the 1918 Hotel Cleveland was connected to the complex. Cleveland Union Terminal was dedicated and officially opened in 1930.

The facility included a number of retail stores and restaurants. Original designs for the complex show that at first the brothers did not plan on building an office tower within the complex. However, they eventually decided to build the 52-story Terminal Tower on the northeast side of the complex facing Public Square.

In 1931, the Higbee Company moved its main store to a new building connected to Cleveland Union Terminal. In 1934, the U.S. Postal Service moved its main Cleveland office to Union Terminal in a new building designed by the firm of Walker and Weeks. It was known as M.K. Ferguson Plaza under the ownership of Forest City Enterprises.[3]

The Union Terminal served most rail lines: the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, New York Central Railroad and Nickel Plate Road.[4] Exceptions were the Pennsylvania Railroad and initially the Erie Railroad.

Former departure board

Notable trains, particularly for their destinations included:

  • Baltimore and Ohio Railroad:[5]
  • Erie Railroad, with the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad:[6]
    • Steel King (Cleveland–Pittsburgh, with morning and evening variations)
  • New York Central Railroad:[7][8]
    • Chicagoan (Chicago–New York)
    • Cincinnati Mercury (Cincinnati–Cleveland) (beginning in fall, 1951)[9]
    • Cleveland Mercury (Detroit–Cleveland)
    • Empire State Express (Cleveland–New York)
    • Fifth Avenue Special (Chicago–Cleveland-New York)
    • Iroquois (Boston–Chicago; in most years operating westbound only; in some years terminating in Cleveland, in some years having New York as the eastern terminus)
    • North Star (New York–Cleveland; in most years operating westbound only)
    • Ohio State Limited (Cincinnati–Cleveland–New York; in some years stopping for east-bound trips only, in other years running through the city without stopping)
    • Pacemaker (Chicago–Cleveland–New York; in some years stopping for east-bound trips only; in latter years: Cleveland–New York)
    • Southwestern Limited (St. Louis–Indianapolis–Cleveland–New York)
  • Nickel Plate Road (Norfolk and Western in final year of service):[10][11]
    • Nickel Plate Limited (Chicago–Buffalo) [later named City of Chicago westbound/City of Cleveland eastbound]
    • Blue Arrow (Cleveland–St. Louis)/Blue Dart (St. Louis–Cleveland)

However, the station was never particularly popular with the railroads. It required deviating from the quicker route along Lake Erie. As the city would not allow trains to operate under steam power near the downtown area, trains were forced to switch from steam to electric power at a suburban rail yard when heading inbound and then reverse on the way out at another yard. As a result, some lines began to bypass the station entirely, heading along the lake route, and some trains stopped serving the city altogether (examples of the latter case: the New York Central Railroad's Lake Shore Limited and the New England States).

Several east–west routes on the circuit of trains bound east from Chicago through northern Ohio bypassed the city, traveling slightly to the south, passing through Akron and Youngstown, as in the case of B&O and Erie mainlines. In addition, national passenger rail travel had already passed its peak and was starting its gradual decline in favor of the automobile and, later, the airplane. The Erie Railroad, owned by the Van Sweringens, could not afford the electric transfer and continued to use its own nearby station until 1948, when it replaced steam with diesel locomotives and was able to serve the Union Terminal under its own power.

By the end of 1965, the B&O and the Norfolk and Western (the successor to the Nickel Plate) had terminated their last trains that had served Cleveland. By the end of 1967, the New York Central had discontinued all named trains that had run through Cleveland. All that remained as passenger trains were unnamed successors to trains #51 (westbound Empire State Express), #90 (eastbound successor to the Chicagoan), #27/28 (successor to the New England States) and #63/#64 (Chicago–New York) trains.[12]

In the lead-up to the arrival of Amtrak, in 1970 the Erie Lackawanna ran an unnamed train to Youngstown.[13] The Penn Central (successor to the New York Central) Chicago-bound trains stopping at the terminal included an unnamed remnant of the Empire State Express and another unnamed train. East-bound, there was an unnamed successor to the New England States, as well as two other unnamed trains. Southwest-bound there was an Indianapolis-destined remnant of the Southwestern Limited and an Ohio State Limited remnant bound for Columbus.[14]

Amtrak's short-lived Lake Shore served Union Terminal for seven months in 1971, but the railroad found the rents prohibitive. When the new Lake Shore Limited began in 1975, Amtrak chose to construct a new station near Lake Erie adjacent to the Cleveland Memorial Shoreway.[15] The new Amtrak station is located near the former Cleveland Union Depot, once served by the Pennsylvania Railroad. The former Erie Railroad commuter service, ultimately inherited by Conrail, was discontinued on January 14, 1977, ending the facility's use as a railroad station.[16]

However, in 2021, a rail advocacy group by the name of All Aboard Ohio, voted in favor of returning Amtrak service to Union Terminal, in the anticipation of a proposed dramatic increase in rail service.[17]

Diagrams of former Cleveland area railroad stations
New York, Chicago and St. Louis LS&MS (New York Central) - AMTK ERIE (Erie Lackawanna Railway) - CR CT&V (Baltimore and Ohio) - CVSR
to Fostoria
Lorain
Avon Lake
Bay Village
Rocky River
West 25th
Cleveland Union Terminal
Cleveland (Broadway)
Euclid Avenue (Until 1930)
East Cleveland (After 1930)
Euclid
Wickliffe
Willoughby
Mentor
Painesville
Elyria (Oberlin)
(PC)
Shawville
Olmsted Falls
Berea
West Park
Linndale
Cleveland Union Depot
Cleveland Union Terminal
East 40th
(formerly Case Ave.)
East 55th
(formerly Willson Ave.)
East 105th
East Cleveland
Coits
(formerly Coit)
Collinwood
Nottingham
(formerly Euclid)
Noble
Wickliffe
Willoughby
Reynolds
Mentor
Heisley
Painesville
(PC)

All stations are NYC
unless noted otherwise:

Amtrak
(AMTK)
Penn Central
(PC)
Cleveland Union Terminal
East 55th Street
East 93rd Street
Corlett
Lee Road–Shaker Heights
North Randall
Solon
Geauga Lake
Aurora
Mantua
Jeddoe
Garrettsville–Hiram
Mahoning
Phalanx
Leavittsburg
Warren
Niles
Youngstown
Main Line to points east
Cleveland Union Terminal (B&O)
Brooklyn (B&O)
Willow (B&O)
South Park (B&O)
Rockside
Canal Exploration Center
Alexanders (B&O)
Brecksville (B&O)
Jaite (B&O)
Boston Mill (B&O)
Peninsula Depot (B&O)
Everett (B&O)
Indigo Lake
Ira (B&O)
Botzum (B&O)
Old Portage (B&O)
Big Bend
Akron Northside (B&O)
to Akron CT&V Depot (B&O)
to Akron Union Depot (B&O)
Akron Junction (B&O)
East Akron (B&O)
Krumroy (B&O)
Myersville (B&O)
Aultman (B&O)
North Canton (B&O)
Canton Lincoln Highway
Canton (B&O)
North Industry (B&O)
East Sparta (B&O)
Sandyville (B&O)
Mineral City (B&O)
Valley Junction (B&O)

Key:

Shopping mall

Most of the platform area was demolished in the late 1980s renovation of the building. The station area itself was converted by Forest City Enterprises into a three-story, 367,000 square foot[18] shopping mall and food court known as The Avenue, which opened on March 26, 1990. As part of the renovation, RTA rebuilt its rapid transit station beneath the center. The rest of the platform area was turned into a parking garage for the new complex. When the already renamed Tower City Center reopened, the mall housed many high-end retailers, including Bally of Switzerland, Barneys New York, Fendi, Gucci, Versace, and even had a letter of intent from Neiman Marcus to build a 120,000-square foot anchor store in 1992.[19][20][21] Over the following 25 years, many of those shops were replaced by more-modest stores, some of them local retailers.[22]

In 1991, two new 11-story office towers, the Skylight Office Tower and the Chase Financial Plaza, were added. The Chase Building houses Cleveland's Ritz-Carlton Hotel and The Skylight Office Tower housed the former Hard Rock Cafe. After the completion of the nearby Gateway project in 1994, RTA built an indoor walkway connecting Tower City to the complex. A second walkway was built in 2002 to connect Tower City with the Carl B. Stokes U.S. Courthouse.

Higbee's (by then bought by Dillard's) closed its department store in the complex in January, 2002. Positively Cleveland (formerly the Convention and Visitors Bureau of Greater Cleveland) and the Greater Cleveland Partnership (the local chamber of commerce) opened offices in the Higbee Building in 2007. Until late 2010, the Cleveland Plus Visitors Center occupied the first floor.[23][24][25] The building was opened on May 14, 2012, as the Horseshoe Casino Cleveland.[26] After Rock Gaming LLC took over management of the Horseshoe, the casino was transformed into Jack Cleveland Casino and reopened on May 11, 2016.[27]

In 2001, Time Warner Cable Amphitheater opened as an outdoor stage along the Cuyahoga River near the Tower City Complex. A site on the Cuyahoga River side of the complex was proposed as a location for a new Cleveland convention center, but in January, 2009 the Cuyahoga County Commissioners decided to redevelop the existing facility.[28]

In July, 2021 businessman Dan Gilbert's company Bedrock announced plans to convert the mall into a "retail marketplace" with a blend of retail and entertainment.[29] After renovations were completed in 2022, the main atrium was renamed to "Skylight Park".[30]

Former rapid transit stations

Former Red Line station

Public Square
Red Line platforms
General information
Owned byGreater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority
Construction
Structure typeUnderground
History
OpenedMarch 15, 1955 (1955-03-15)
Closed1980s-1990s
Previous namesCleveland Terminal
Original companyCleveland Transit System
Key dates
Interurban platforms builtJuly 20, 1930
Platforms rebuilt1955
Former services
Preceding station Rapid Transit Following station
Lorain–West 25th
toward Airport
Red Line East 34th–Campus
toward Windermere

The Red Line took the place of a never-completed interurban line. An additional vault for that line was located at Mayfield Road, now the Little Italy–University Circle station.

History

The Shaker rapid transit remained the only service using the interurban portion of the CUT for 25 years. When the Cleveland Transit System built its rapid transit (later designated the Red Line) in 1955 (using much of the right-of-way previously developed by the Van Sweringens), another rapid transit station was built in the former interurban area of the CUT to serve it. Since the CTS Rapid Transit (Red Line) and the Shaker rapid transit (Green and Blue Lines) were owned by different entities at the time, there was no fare transfer between the trains, and the stations were entirely separate.

In 1968, the Cleveland Transit System line finished its extension through Cleveland's west side to Cleveland Hopkins International Airport and Cleveland became the first North American city with direct rapid transit access from downtown to an airport.[31]

Both lines became part of the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority when it assumed control on September 5, 1975. The two stations remained separate until December 17, 1990, when an entirely new station was completed with the development of Tower City Center.[32]

Former Shaker Rapid station

Tower City
Temporary platforms in August 2016
General information
Owned byGreater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority
Construction
Structure typeUnderground
History
OpenedJuly 20, 1930
July 31, 2016
December 28, 2020
Closed1980s-1990s
November 26, 2016
Previous namesPublic Square, Downtown Terminal, Cleveland Terminal
Original companyCleveland Interurban Railroad
Former services
Preceding station Rapid Transit Following station
2016
West 25th–Ohio City
toward Airport
Red Line
also 2020
East 34th–Campus
One-way operation
through to Waterfront Line Blue Line
Green Line
Settlers Landing Waterfront Line through to Blue and Green Lines
Until 1980s
Terminus Blue Line East 34th–Campus
Green Line East 34th–Campus
toward Green Road

These platforms opened with the extension of the Cleveland Interurban Railroad from just east of the ramp at East 34th Street and Broadway in 1930.

History

Since the Van Sweringens owned Cleveland Interurban Railroad which served the suburb of Shaker Heights, the interurban portion of the CUT was immediately occupied by the Shaker trains upon completion on July 20, 1930. (Previously, the Shaker trains had used streetcar tracks to reach downtown from East 34th Street, which caused significantly slower service.) The Shaker rapid transit station was located along the northernmost tracks of the complex, and it included a small yard for the storage of a few trains and a loop to allow trains to reverse direction. Development of the other interurban services, however, was stalled by the Great Depression, which hit the Van Sweringens particularly hard. By 1944, ownership of the Shaker rapid transit passed to the city of Shaker Heights.

The Shaker and Van Aken lines became part of the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority when it assumed control on September 5, 1975. The two stations remained separate until December 17, 1990, when a completely new station was completed with the development of Tower City Center.[33]

The platform was temporarily re-opened for westbound passengers in 2016 and 2020.

See also

Connected components of Tower City Center

References

  1. "National Register Information System  (#76001405)". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  2. "Shaker Hts. & The Van Sweringens". Cleveland Historical. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
  3. "Post Office Plaza". Forest City Enterprises. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
  4. McGraw-Hill 1918, p. 865.
  5. "Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, Tables A, 13". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 84 (7). December 1951.
  6. "Erie Railroad, Table 13". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 84 (7). December 1951.
  7. New York Central timetable, June 17, 1951, Tables 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 14, 16, 23, 37 http://streamlinermemories.info/NYC/NYC51-6TT.pdf
  8. "New York Central Railroad; Tables 1, 2, 4, 5, 10". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 84 (7). December 1951.
  9. September 1951 New York Central timetable, Table 23
  10. "Nickel Plate Road, Condensed Through Schedules; Tables 1, 2". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 84 (7). December 1951.
  11. "Nickel Plate Road, Condensed Through Schedules; Tables 1, 2". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 90 (7). December 1957.
  12. New York Central timetable, December 3, 1967
  13. "Erie Lackawanna Railroad, Table 1". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 102 (12). May 1970.
  14. "Penn Central Railroad, Tables 3, 4, 45, 46". Official Guide of the Railways. National Railway Publication Company. 102 (12). May 1970.
  15. Toman & Hayes 1996, pp. 280 and 295.
  16. Toman & Hayes 1996, p. 297.
  17. Glaser, Susan; clevel; .com (2021-04-15). "Rail advocacy group wants Cleveland Amtrak station back at Tower City". cleveland. Retrieved 2021-11-30.
  18. "The Avenue at Tower City Center". Forest City Enterprises. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
  19. Jarboe, Michelle (March 21, 2009). "Cleveland's downtown is considered choice real estate for outlet shopping". Cleveland.com. Advance Publications. Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  20. Turbett, Peggy (March 25, 2012). "Forest City CEO David LaRue oversees change at company, Tower City Center: Talk with the Boss". Cleveland.com. Advance Publications. Retrieved March 23, 2013.
  21. "Cleveland Bucking The Gloomy Trend In Malls". Chicago Tribune. Tribune Publishing. February 17, 1991. Retrieved March 23, 2013.
  22. "Tower City then and now". Cleveland.com. Advance Publications. October 14, 2007. Retrieved June 15, 2008.
  23. "About Cleveland". Positively Cleveland. Retrieved June 10, 2008.
  24. Litt, Steven (February 3, 2011). "Casino won't dramatically alter Cleveland's beloved Higbee Building". Cleveland.com. Advance Publications. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
  25. "Something's Happening Here" (PDF). Zygote Press. p. 34. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
  26. "Horseshoe Casino Cleveland aims to draw new crowd to downtown attractions". 14 July 2011.
  27. TEGNA. "New name, new vibe for Cleveland Jack casino". WKYC. Retrieved 2016-06-02.
  28. Litt, Steven (January 31, 2009). "Chosen medical mart site offers second chance for Mall". Cleveland.com. Advance Publications. Retrieved February 20, 2009.
  29. Heisig, Eric (July 15, 2021). "Cavs owner Dan Gilbert's Bedrock firm plans to retool downtown Cleveland's Tower City Center into 'marketplace'". The Plain Dealer. Retrieved July 17, 2021.
  30. Petkiewicz, David (18 July 2022). "Skylight Park opens in Tower City Center (photos)". cleveland.com. Cleveland.com / The Plain Dealer. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  31. "History of public transit in Greater Cleveland". Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
  32. "About RTA:History of Public Transit in Greater Cleveland". RTA Website. Retrieved 2007-06-26.
  33. "About RTA: History of Public Transit in Greater Cleveland". RTA Website. Retrieved 2007-06-26.

Sources

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