Dixie Terminal
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Image:DixieTerminalExterior.jpg
The Dixie Terminal is a set of buildings in Cincinnati, Ohio, that were completed in 1921 and served as a streetcar terminal, stock exchange, and office building in the city's downtown business district. They were designed by Cincinnati architect Frederick W. Garber's Garber & Woodward firm.{{cite web| url=http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WM3P3Y_DIXIE_TERMINAL_BUILDING_Cincinnati_Ohio| title=Dixie Terminal Building| publisher=Waymarking| date=27 April 2008| accessdate=2015-07-06}}{{cite web| title=John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge| url=http://www.cincinnati-transit.net/suspension.html| publisher=Cincinnati transit| accessdate=2015-07-06}} The main building includes an Adamesque barrel-vaulted concourse and Rookwood Architectural Faience entry arch.{{cite web|url=http://daap.uc.edu/library/archcinci/7ingalls.html |title=Unknown Ref |publisher=University of Cincinnati |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090910075535/http://www.daap.uc.edu/library/archcinci/7ingalls.html |archivedate=September 10, 2009 }} The Rookwood tiles were manufactured by the local Rookwood Pottery Company.
At Fourth and Walnut Streets, the terminal was constructed of reinforced concrete and finished in gray brick, Bedford limestone, and granite. It includes two structures: the four-story south building extending to Third Street, where streetcars entered and left, and the "handsome" 10-story north building, housing railroad ticket agencies, the Cincinnati Stock Exchange, administrative offices of the Cincinnati Street Railway Company, commercial offices, and shops.{{cite book| title=Cincinnati: A Guide to the Queen City and Its Neighbors 1943| chapter=Tour 4| page=174| date=June 1987| publisher=Cincinnati Historical Society| isbn=978-0911497045}}
A long and elaborate arcade runs through from main entrance through the building, lined by shops. The building included marble floors, Bottincino marble wainscot, metal trimmings, and "costly brightly decorated ceilings, with fanciful medallions showing little children riding on the backs of various animals".
The terminal was used for bus service after streetcar service ceased in the 1950s. Buses arriving from Northern Kentucky crossed the Roebling Suspension Bridge and took ramps from the bridge into the terminal. In 1998 the ramps were removed, and the bus service ceased using the terminal. The Cincinnati Stock Exchange closed its physical trading floor in 1976 after becoming an all-electronic stock trading exchange but remained in the building until relocating to Chicago in 1995 as the National Stock Exchange.
A scene in the 1988 film Rain Man was shot at Dixie Terminal.{{cite web| url=http://www.wcpo.com/entertainment/local-a-e/rain-man-then-and-now-a-look-back-at-rain-man-in-cincinnati-and-northern-kentucky| title=Then and Now: A look back at 'Rain Man' in Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky| work=WCPO-TV News| date=February 28, 2014| accessdate=2 April 2014}}
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Ornament and decoration
File:Dixie Terminal Entrance, September 2010.jpg
Joseph Francis Beller is believed responsible for the original gold-leafing and the "frolicking" cherubs in the building.{{cite web| title=Dixie Terminal Redux| date=13 November 2008| url=http://visualingual.wordpress.com/2008/11/13/dixie-terminal-redux/| publisher=VisuaLingual| accessdate=2015-07-06}}
See also
{{Commons category|Dixie Terminal}}