Buffalo's Central Terminal opened in 1929 to serve more than 200 trains and 10,000 passengers daily. The 17-story Art Deco style station was designed by architects Alfred Fellheimer and Steward Wagner ...
The Central Terminal Restoration Corp., the nonprofit that owns and manages Buffalo Central Terminal, is working to restore the historic site. The corporation's aim for the next two years is to enable ...
Editorial contribution by Central Terminal Restoration Corp. A lot has been happening at your Buffalo Central Terminal! Right now, we’re performing work on the masonry of the iconic Tower and Entry ...
The Central Terminal Restoration Corporation has released a new video that details the current progress of Phase II of the development project. Over the course of the next two years, the plan is to ...
A rare look inside the head house and the train platforms of Buffalo's Central Terminal. The landmark turns 90 this month. A hole in the roof of a train platform shows the head house at the Central ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. - Restoration on Buffalo's landmark Central Terminal is slowly making progress. The Central Terminal Restoration Corporation owns the property and installed two hundred solar panels last ...
"It shows anything is possible once you have the funding behind it," said Paul Lang, vice chairman of the Central Terminal Restoration Corp., the non-profit that owns the abandoned Buffalo station.
Revitalization of the East Side’s art deco marvel – with its 16-story tower, grand concourse, mezzanine and baggage building – has defied easy answers since Amtrak left the station for good in October ...
The New York Central Railroad was on a roll back in 1929, when it completed its Buffalo Central Terminal, filling the massive Art Deco station with marble walls, terrazzo floors, and stylish bronze ...
In Buffalo, the example of Detroit’s enormous Michigan Central Station looms particularly large: After decades of decay, the property was purchased by the Ford Motor Company and given a six-year, $1 ...
A tangible sign of development at the Central Terminal — the last architectural titan yet to be restored in Buffalo — will be announced today, raising hopes among its enthusiasts that even more ...