L&N Station (Knoxville)
http://dbpedia.org/resource/L&N_Station_(Knoxville) an entity of type: Thing
The L&N Station is a former rail passenger station in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States, located in the downtown area at the northern end of the World's Fair Park. Built in 1905 by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad and designed by its chief engineer, Richard Montfort, the station was renovated for use in the 1982 World's Fair, and is currently home to Knox County's STEM-based magnet high school, the L&N STEM Academy. In 1982, the building was added to the National Register of Historic Places for its architecture and role in Knoxville's transportation history.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
L&N Station (Knoxville)
rdf:langString
Louisville and Nashville Passenger Station
rdf:langString
Louisville and Nashville Passenger Station
xsd:float
35.96416854858398
xsd:float
-83.92444610595703
xsd:integer
30252453
xsd:integer
1119945353
rdf:langString
Willoughby
xsd:date
1982-03-25
rdf:langString
Richard Monfort
rdf:langString
Victorian, Chateauesque
xsd:integer
1904
rdf:langString
The L&N Station, viewed from Western Avenue
rdf:langString
Cincinnati–Atlanta
xsd:integer
700
rdf:langString
Knoxville, Tennessee
xsd:integer
82003982
rdf:langString
Louisville and Nashville Railroad
xsd:string
35.964166666666664 -83.92444444444445
rdf:langString
Welwyn
rdf:langString
The L&N Station is a former rail passenger station in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States, located in the downtown area at the northern end of the World's Fair Park. Built in 1905 by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad and designed by its chief engineer, Richard Montfort, the station was renovated for use in the 1982 World's Fair, and is currently home to Knox County's STEM-based magnet high school, the L&N STEM Academy. In 1982, the building was added to the National Register of Historic Places for its architecture and role in Knoxville's transportation history. The L&N completed a rail line running from Cincinnati to Atlanta in the early 1900s, and built a string of passenger stations and depots to service trains along this line. The company's Knoxville station was the city's largest, and considered by some the "finest" along the L&N's entire Cincinnati–Atlanta line. It served as a passenger station until the L&N ceased passenger train service to Knoxville in 1968, and continued to house L&N offices until 1975. The L&N Station is mentioned in several scenes in author James Agee's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, A Death in the Family. The L&N Station is now home to the L&N STEM Academy, a magnet high school which focuses on science, technology, engineering, and math.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
24473
xsd:double
5204.2573592064
xsd:string
82003982
xsd:gYear
1904
<Geometry>
POINT(-83.924446105957 35.964168548584)