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Broad Street Station at Broad and Market streets in Philadelphia was the primary passenger terminal for the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) in the city from December 1881 until the 1950s. [1] Located directly west of Philadelphia City Hall , the site is now occupied by the northwest section of Dilworth Park and the office towers of Penn Center .
The Terminal, also known as the Pittsburgh Produce Terminal and formerly the Pennsylvania Fruit Auction & Sales Building, is a building located at 2100 Smallman Street in the Strip District neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Built in 1926, the Produce Terminal stretches 1,533 feet long over five blocks.
The market is actually two separate structures. The older Stone Market house was completed in 1863 and held the name "West Harrisburg Market House". [4] The Brick Market house was built between 1874 and 1878. From 1869, a wooden frame wing extension spanned from the Stone Building to the Capitol Street alley until its destruction in 1976-1977. [5]
Broad Street Station (demolished 1953), NW corner of Broad and Market Streets, before 1901; Philadelphia architect Frank Furness greatly expanded the station in 1893. A 1903 photograph of the train-shed wall on Market Street from 15th Street to 16th Street 1700 block of Market Street in the Penn Center area west of City Hall
In 1889, the Philadelphia and Reading Railway decided to build a train depot, passenger station, and company headquarters on the corner of 12th and Market Streets. The move came eight years after the Pennsylvania Railroad opened its Broad Street Station several blocks away at 15th and Market Streets, and one year after the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad opened its 24th Street Station at 24th and ...
HABS No. PA-5958, "North Philadelphia Station, 2900 North Broad Street, on northwest corner of Broad Street and Glenwood Avenue", 72 photos, 15 data pages, 9 photo caption pages HABS No. PA-5958-A, " North Philadelphia Station, Street Car Waiting House ", 7 photos, 2 data pages, 2 photo caption pages
KING OF PRUSSIA, Pa. (WHTM) — A huge, multi-level Italian marketplace will soon be opening its first-ever Pennsylvania location inside the King of Prussia Mall. ... Massive Italian market to ...
The current line runs from 69th Street Terminal just west of Philadelphia, west and north to Norristown, splitting from the original main line at Villanova Junction. P&W's previous main line went west to a terminus just east of Sugartown Road in Strafford , then later, another 0.47 miles (0.76 km) further, on an extension providing transfer to ...