The front facade of the former passenger station features a bay window extending from the basement to the roof and dividing it into two sections.
[2] The complex includes an original steam engine with a "Pullman" train car, an outdoor performance area, and a building that used to house one of Huntington's first banks—which was the easternmost bank robbed by the James-Younger Gang.
For decades, the station sat hidden and virtually unused just two blocks from the city center, until Create Huntington got involved in 2006.
Today, Heritage Station is an artisan retail complex, with locally owned shops, and home to public events like the annual Diamond Teeth Mary Blues Festival, named for the blues singer born in the town.
This article about a property in Cabell County, West Virginia on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.