Cincinnati landmark Dixie Terminal keeps reinventing itself. It has served as a streetcar terminal, bus terminal, stock exchange, railroad ticket office, and office building. The Fourth Street entrance is a grand two-story arch lined with colorful Faience tiles. The lobby is a two-story barrel-vaulted arcade.
- Name: Dixie Terminal
- Location: 49 East 4th Street
- Year Completed: 1921
- Architect: Garber & Woodward
- Style: Beaux Arts
- Wikipedia: Dixie Terminal
- Google Map
Gallery: Hover over photos for captions; click to view images in lightbox

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Cincinnati’s Dixie Terminal, built in 1921 and designed by Frederick W Garber, originally housed a streetcar terminal, and later a bus terminal, plus rail ticket offices and a stock exchange.

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Cincinnati’s Dixie Terminal, built in 1921 and designed by Frederick W Garber, originally housed a streetcar terminal, and later a bus terminal, plus rail ticket offices and a stock exchange.

DixieTerminal_5994.jpg
Cincinnati’s Dixie Terminal, built in 1921 and designed by Frederick W Garber, originally housed a streetcar terminal, and later a bus terminal, plus rail ticket offices and a stock exchange.

DixieTerminal_6000.jpg
Cincinnati’s Dixie Terminal, built in 1921 and designed by Frederick W Garber, originally housed a streetcar terminal, and later a bus terminal, plus rail ticket offices and a stock exchange.

DixieTerminal_6001.jpg
Cincinnati’s Dixie Terminal, built in 1921 and designed by Frederick W Garber, originally housed a streetcar terminal, and later a bus terminal, plus rail ticket offices and a stock exchange.

DixieTerminal_6004.jpg
Cincinnati’s Dixie Terminal, built in 1921 and designed by Frederick W Garber, originally housed a streetcar terminal, and later a bus terminal, plus rail ticket offices and a stock exchange.

DixieTerminal_8772.jpg
Cincinnati’s Dixie Terminal, built in 1921 and designed by Frederick W Garber, originally housed a streetcar terminal, and later a bus terminal, plus rail ticket offices and a stock exchange.

DixieTerminal_8774.jpg
Cincinnati’s Dixie Terminal, built in 1921 and designed by Frederick W Garber, originally housed a streetcar terminal, and later a bus terminal, plus rail ticket offices and a stock exchange.
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