News & Reviews News Wire News photos: Hamilton, Ohio, station on the move

News photos: Hamilton, Ohio, station on the move

By Trains Staff | December 20, 2022

| Last updated on February 7, 2024

First of two station buildings is relocated

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Two-story brick building on wheels moves rolls onto street
Moving at a walking pace, the first part of the Hamilton, Ohio, station building eases off its longtime site onto Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard on Tuesday, Dec. 20. Robert Federle

HAMILTON, Ohio — The move is in progress today for the first of two structures that make up the Hamilton, Ohio, railroad station — a structure dating to the 1850s and with a history including visits from at least four U.S. presidents.

The station, donated to the city by CSX Transportation, is being located from its trackside location to a site about 1,100 feet away on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. Today’s move of the two-story station building will be followed in January by the move of a single-story structure [see “Hamilton, Ohio, station nears move,” Trains News Wire, Dec. 15, 2022]. Costs for the move are estimated at $1.9 million.

Future use for the relocated station has yet to be determined.

Station building on wheels with train in background
A Norfolk Southern auto rack train passes the station as it moves. Robert Federle
Building on street with people taking pictures in foreground
The station nears the end of its 1,100-foot journey. Robert Federle
Building moves onto new lot
The station building slowly moves onto the lot that will be its new home. Robert Federle

7 thoughts on “News photos: Hamilton, Ohio, station on the move

  1. Where is Jaw Tooth?

    He is supposed to be around there somewhere. It’s one of his favorite video haunts.

    “Start the video son”

  2. George, it’s a hydraulic power pack diesel or gas engine diving a hydraulic pump. Coupled with a radio control system that operates the solenoid valves to drive or turn the wheel assemblies.

  3. It looks like the prime mover is inside the yellow box on the front, guided remotely by someone on the ground. The details of this arrangement would be interesting.

    1. I think that is how it works- much like a locomotive, the yellow box houses a diesel engine that spins a generator, then that power is fed to electric motors on each axle.

    2. Apparently It’s hydraulic. Diesel-hydraulic locomotives never caught on, but apparently they work fine for moving buildings.

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