Union Station Constructed

Image

Format

jpg

License

Creative Commons Licence

Contributors

Contributed date

November 25, 2019 - 10:32am

Critical Commentary

In the 1930s, Los Angeles city officials and railroad company executives reached an agreement to build a large central train station called Union Station. Perceived as a decrepit slum, Chinatown was the site selected for the future Union Station. The city thus believed it could kill two birds with one stone: demolish a racialized slum, and build a shiny new monument to the city's bright future. It was only through the actions of Chinatown neighborhood elites that the project was delayed for a year, and new land was purchased to create a "New Chinatown."

Source

Panorama of Union Station, Los Angeles. 1939. Source: Pomona Public Library

Cite as

Anonymous, "Union Station Constructed", contributed by Raymond Fang, Center for Ethnography, Platform for Experimental Collaborative Ethnography, last modified 25 November 2019, accessed 28 April 2024. http://centerforethnography.org/content/union-station-constructed