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Michigan Central. Visit The Station. Now booking Group & Guided Tours! Explore The Station with a guided tour powered by Detroit History Tours.
The Michigan Central Open experience at the train station, located at 2001 15th St. in Detroit, is just getting started and will chug along through the summer, offering plenty of chances to...
Following an extensive six-year renovation by Ford Motor Company, the once-abandoned train station has reopened its doors as the centerpiece of Michigan Central, a 30-acre technology and cultural hub in Detroit’s Corktown neighborhood.
Michigan Central Station is finally back. It's been 36 years since the last train left the station, but this week, Ford Motor Co. will reopen the long-empty building to the public once again.
Discover The Station at Michigan Central through guided tours powered by Detroit History Tours. Expert guides will lead you on a 90-minute journey through the ground floor to experience The Station’s historic restoration and transformation from shuttered train depot to the centerpiece of Michigan Central’s 30-acre tech and cultural hub.
Discover the rich history and incredible transformation of Michigan Central Station on this 90-minute guided station tour. First opened in 1913, the iconic Beaux-Arts structure once served as Detroit's bustling railway hub until its closure in 1988.
Michigan Central Station (MCS, also known as Michigan Central Depot) is the historic former main intercity passenger rail station in Detroit, Michigan.
When the building opened, it was the tallest railroad station in the world, and the fourth tallest building in Detroit. The railroad invested a total of $16 million (nearly $332 million today) on the new station, office building, yards and the underwater rail tunnel, which was inaugurated on Oct. 16, 1910.
The once-blighted monolithic Michigan Central train station — for decades a symbol of Detroit’s decline — has new life following a massive six-year, multimillion-dollar renovation to create a hub for mobility projects in the rebirth of the Motor City.
(Susan Tusa, Detroit Free Press) RIGHT: Today, the exterior of the 640,000-square-foot train station is clean and the towers' 1,184 windows restored to preserve the station’s historic...