El Garces Intermodal Transportation Facility

Needles, CA
A two-story white hotel with a grass lawn surrounded by palm trees
El Garces Intermodal Transportation Facility in July 2014
General information
Other namesEl Garces Intermodal Transportation Facility
Location950 Front Street
Needles, California
United States
Coordinates34°50′27″N 114°36′20″W / 34.84083°N 114.60556°W / 34.84083; -114.60556
Owned byCity of Needles/BNSF Railway
Line(s)BNSF Southern Transcon (Needles Subdivision, Seligman Subdivision)
Platforms1 side and 1 island platform
Tracks3
ConnectionsBus transport Victor Valley Transit Authority: 200
Bus transport Needles Area Transit
Construction
ParkingYes
AccessibleYes
Other information
Station codeAmtrak: NDL
History
Opened1908
Passengers
FY 20235,826[1] (Amtrak)
Services
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Barstow Southwest Chief Kingman
toward Chicago
Former services
Preceding station Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Following station
Goffs Main Line Topock
toward Chicago
El Garces
LocationNeedles, California
Built1908
ArchitectFrancis W. Wilson
Architectural styleClassical Revival
NRHP reference No.02000537[2]
Added to NRHPMay 17, 2002
Location
Map

El Garces Intermodal Transportation Facility (also known as Needles station) is an Amtrak intercity rail station and bus depot in downtown Needles, California. The structure was originally built in 1908 as El Garces, a Harvey House and Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway (ATSF) station. It is named for Francisco Garcés, a Spanish missionary who surveyed the area in the 1770s. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2002.

The Southern Pacific Railroad and ATSF subsidiary Atlantic and Pacific Railroad met at Needles and opened a station there in 1883. The Southern Pacific sold its line to the ATSF the next year, and Needles became a major waypoint on the ATSF route to Los Angeles. After the original station was destroyed by fire in 1906, the ATSF built El Garces – a large neoclassical structure containing a Harvey House hotel, restaurant, and train station – in 1908. It was the "crown jewel" of the Harvey House network, and among the first train stations made of concrete.

The hotel and restaurant closed in 1949 as passenger traffic declined. The ATSF converted the interior for office space and baggage use in the 1950s, and demolished the eastern third of the building in 1961. In 1988, the railroad abandoned El Garces entirely; the city purchased the building in 1999 and reopened it as the El Garces Intermodal Transportation Facility in 2014. In 2016, Amtrak opened a dedicated waiting room for Southwest Chief passengers.

  1. ^ "Amtrak Fact Sheet, Fiscal Year 2023: State of California" (PDF). Amtrak. March 2024. Retrieved June 26, 2024.
  2. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.

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