Puneet Varma (Editor)

Beverly Shores station

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Owned by
  
NICTD

Platforms
  
1 side platform

Connections
  
Calumet Trail

Area
  
3,642 m²

Added to NRHP
  
19 July 1989

Line(s)
  
South Shore Line

Tracks
  
1

Opened
  
1929

Connection
  
Calumet Trail

Architect
  
Arthur U. Gerber

Beverly Shores station

Location
  
Broadway Avenue and US 12, Beverly Shores, Indiana

Address
  
Beverly Shores, IN 46304, United States

Architectural style
  
Mediterranean Revival architecture

Similar
  
11th Street station, Dune Park station, Carroll Avenue station, Florida Tropical House, Millennium Station

Railroad crossing at beverly shores station


Beverly Shores is a train station in Beverly Shores, Indiana, United States, which is served by South Shore Line trains. The station also serves the nearby Town of Pines. It is a flag stop.

Contents

Architecture

This is one of nine such stations built along Insull lines, which included the Chicago North Shore and Milwaukee line. Of the nine, only this station and the North Shore Line's Briergate station still exist. The Mediterranean Revival Style was used for a series of buildings adjacent to the station, including the Bartlett Real Estate Office.

Beverly Shores Station is the last example of the "Insull Spanish" architecture style used for station houses along the electric railroad lines acquired by Samuel Insull in the first part of the twentieth century. It was a Mediterranean Revival style designed by Insull's staff-architect, Arthur U. Gerber. The station is served by daily passenger trains of the South Shore Line. Although freight trains pass daily in either direction, no freight service is offered from this location. The station housed an agent at one time. This section is now an art gallery. The most notable characteristic of the station, aside from the Spanish style, is the large neon sign reading "Beverly Shores".

The station house is located north of the track. There is a rudimentary paved platform structure directly in front of it. A small parking lot is located right behind the depot.

History

The South Shore line began in 1901 as the Chicago and Indiana Air Line Railway. It was incorporated in 1925, when several stations were added, including the Beverly Shores Station at Broadway and another at Central Avenue. The station was designed by architect Arthur Gerber and built in 1929.

Before 1946, a large neon sign was added to the roof. The sign is owned by the town of Beverly Shores and leased to the railroad until November 2034. The land is owned by the Northern Indiana Public Service Company (NIPSCO), who leases it to the railroad on a 99-year lease that began in August 1929. The building is owned by the South Shore Railroad.

On July 19, 1989, the Beverly Shores Station was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

The station, built in 1929 by Leo W. Post, was one of two South Shore stations of similar design. It replaced an earlier structure serving the developing resort community of Beverly Shores on Lake Michigan. This is the last unaltered Insull Spanish style structure of the nine built on Samuel Insull's South and North Shore Lines. It still serves the 88-mile long South Shore Line, the last of the electric interurban railway systems. This station typifies Insull's interurban routes; it is the best representative of the South Shore Line's history.

References

Beverly Shores station Wikipedia