It is a single-story masonry structure, roughly V-shaped due to the triangular parcel, with a tile hip roof with broad eaves supported by Italianate wooden brackets.
A Tuscan tower rises above the station, and its walls consist of bays of compound round-arch windows.
[2] The station served as the main gateway for visitors who connected to the national rail network at nearby Malvern, Arkansas.
This route entered/exited downtown Hot Springs from the northeast along what is today's Convention Boulevard, then named Benton, before turning east-southeast after circling the nearby ridges much as Business US 70 follows presently.
This article about a property in Garland County, Arkansas on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.