During my 3 hour layover in BHM between #19 and #20, I walked around.(What else is there to do in downtown BHM on a Sunday morning?
) The garage that Bill mentioned is very close. If I remember, there are also some spots in the (very) small lot in front of the building, but I think those are short term spots.
IIRC, they plan to rebuild and redesign that station to also include buses and trains, but I don't think they started yet. Right now, I consider it the
worst station on Amtrak!
Traveler, you are correct about the present state of the building. Ironically, the BHM station is relatively new as American stations go. It was built brand new by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad about 1955 or so,close to the same time today's New Orleans station was built. The NOL facility has fared better, obviously, perhaps because it has more trains (and now, buses). I think I am correct in saying the entire building in which the BHM station now exists like a broom closet was the complete L&N station when built new. Thus it was a much larger facility when built. Through the years most of now unneeded that space has gone to other companies,if not torn down and/or abandoned.
I believe George Harris was an L&N ticket agent during those times.
There was another station back then, Terminal Station, which served lines other than L&N. It was big and impressive in an old fashioned way.
The train that took the route taken by today's Crescent was then called the Southerner, and it was operated by the Southern Railroad and used the older Terminal Station. The train which way back then (before Amtrak,etc)called the Crescent did not go to BHM at all. Instead, from ATl it went to Montgomery and Mobile to New Orleans.
The trains which did use the old L&N station when it was larger and nicer than today's Amtrak station were as follows. The Humming Bird, the Pan American, the Azalean and others went Cincinnati, Louisville, Nashville, BHM, Montgomery, Mobile, New Orleans. In addition, the Humming Bird had a section from Chicago and St. Louis, which merged at Nashville with the section from Cincinnati. Also, there was the South Wind (later called Floridian by Amtrak.). It went Chicago, Indianapolis, Louisvlle,Nashville, BHM, Montgomery,Jacksonville,other Florida points.
I gusss my point is, today's station is not the product of design (i.e., let us make it as ugly and crowded as possible) but evolution-- just a sad reflection on how many fewer passenger trains there are than there used to be, and how much less space they need.