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Explore LA

Union Station tours spotlight architecture — and the displaced Chinese American community

The interior of a train station, with sunlight streaming through large windows, and attractive patterns in the tiles below.
Union Station's Mission Moderne design.
(
Herr Hans Gruber
/
LAist Flickr pool
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Union Station tours spotlight architecture, and the displaced Chinese American community
The 1939 building mixes art deco and Spanish colonial in its Mission Moderne style.

You may know about Union Station as an L.A. landmark or as a transportation hub — but how much do you know about its rich architectural history?

To foster that interest and knowledge, Metro created a series of public tours of the station this spring.

“There's so much that you might just walk by without really having the opportunity to delve deeply into,” said Zipporah Lax Yamamoto, deputy executive officer of Metro’s art program. “[The tours are] a really wonderful opportunity to be able to spend time with the station, learn more about the historic landmark, which belongs to all of us.”

This is a photo of Union Station. A view looking upward of a cream colored building with large brown arch way. Scenery of four palm trees on the side of the building.
Union Station in Los Angeles
(
Myung J. Chun
/
Getty Images
)
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Architectural style

It’s called Union Station because when it opened in 1939, it connected the Southern Pacific and Union Pacific railroads with the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railway.

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While it was designed by father-and-son team Donald and John Parkinson, the architects who gave us L.A. City Hall, its style is very different. Union Station’s interior and exterior mixes art deco, Spanish colonial and other styles into a hybrid dubbed Mission Moderne.

As you begin the tour, entering from Alameda Street, tour guides ask you to look up at the decorative elements in the high ceilings. The beams and geometric patterns may look like wood — but they’re actually just painted to look that way.

A community destroyed by development

Along the way, the tour gives background on pieces created more than 30 years ago. These include "City of Dreams/River of History" by artists May Sun and Richard Wyatt in 1995. Sun’s piece uses remnants of the Chinese American homes torn down to build the station, a reference to the high price that community paid for this building’s construction.

Pieces of glass bottles embedded in an art piece.
Detail from "City of Dreams/River of History," created by artists May Sun and Richard Wyatt at Union Station.
(
Adolfo Guzman-Lopez/LAist
)

“It was an enormous price. Chinatown ceased to exist in this area. … The families that lived here during that time are still around and maintain archives of that time period and the original Chinatown here, and we've worked with those families to have those objects on display,” Lax Yamamoto said.

Meanwhile, Wyatt’s large-scale mural includes the face of a Chinese man, along with nine other people of different races, ethnicities and ages; a nod to the diversity of the city since its founding in the late 1700s.

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There are also stops to see new art installed for the World Cup.

A mural shows several people of various ages and ethnicities, wearing blue, brown and teal clothes.
A mural by Richard Wyatt at Union Station
(
Adolfo Guzman-Lopez/LAist
)

There are three tours left in the series but the RSVPs have reached their maximum; however, Lax Yamamoto said Metro will decide whether to continue them based on what people have thought about the tours.

Meanwhile, Union Station is set to swell with people in the next couple of months as L.A. hosts World Cup games. The station is the site of an official FIFA-sponsored Fan Zone from June 25-28.

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