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Iowa city to purchase former CB&Q station

By Trains Staff | July 7, 2022

| Last updated on February 24, 2024


Ottumwa depot, used by Amtrak, is seen as significant for downtown redevelopment

OTTUMWA, Iowa — The City of Ottumwa has agreed to purchase the city’s Amtrak depot, currently owned by the Iowa Heartland Historical Connection.

The Ottumwa Courier reports that, by a 4-1 vote on Tuesday, the Ottumwa City Council agreed to purchase the building at a cost of $480,000, funds included in bond approvals earlier this summer. An adjacent clubhouse will also be included.

City Administrator Philip Rath and council member Marc Roe both indicated that the building could be crucial to downtown redevelopment, with Roe saying the city had previously “lost a grant that would completely completely re-imagine what downtown at the time will look like because we didn’t have control of that building.”

Rath also said Amtrak is interested in extending its waiting-room lease and improving the station platform, and is interested in having the city as a “secure partner, somebody they know is going to be stable, and not raising rent uncontrollably.”

According to Amtrak’s Great American Stations website, the limestone-faced structure, built by the Benson Construction Co. of Chicago for the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy, was dedicated in May 1951. Its waiting room is currently used by California Zephyr passengers; from 1988 to 2020, it also housed the Wapello County Historical Museum.

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