Stolen clock plans
"There was nothing in this building when we got it. It's a gritty building, not refined," Bardelli said.
The new main lobby windows at the Michigan Central Station in Detroit on Jan 11, 2022.
The new main lobby windows at the Michigan Central Station in Detroit on Jan 11, 2022. Kimberly P. Mitchell, Detroit Free Press
More:Ford plans to turn Michigan Central Station and grounds into a showplace for public art
A carriage house behind the train station still requires work but that's where the legendary stolen clock — returned anonymously in 2018 — will be placed, Bardelli said.
Other pieces of the train station picked apart by scavengers over the years have been reinstalled, including cast-iron rosettes that line the dramatic new windows. Technology workers scanned a few steel rosettes with a 3D printer to replace more than 500. Once they're painted, it's impossible to tell the difference.
A 3D printed replica of a window rosette made out of resin in placed next to the original cast iron rosette it will replace at the Michigan Central Station in Detroit on Jan 11, 2022.
A 3D printed replica of a window rosette made out of resin in placed next to the original cast iron rosette it will replace at the Michigan Central Station in Detroit on Jan 11, 2022. Kimberly P. Mitchell, Detroit Free Press
Standing on a scissor lift 30 feet in the air, paint roller in hand, Ruben Gavia rolled paint on the ceiling around drywall painted to look like dark wood. Walter Lopez stood below him as a safety watch for Eugenio Painting Co., one of many local businesses working on the station.
Visitors walked carefully on plywood laid to protect the marble from heavy equipment moving material through the building.
Pointing to the ceiling in one room, Bardelli noted that 29,000 clay tiles had to be stabilized — 1,700 of them replaced. Workers applied 8.6 miles of grout lines.
The building had just steam heat, never air conditioning. So all that ductwork is being installed now in the basement. Fire alarms need to be added to comply with code.
The prospects for redeveloping Detroit's long-vacant train depot have dramatically improved in the past couple years. JC Reindl/Detroit Free Press
This train station opened earlier than scheduled, on Dec. 26, 1913, because a fire destroyed the station at Third and Jefferson.
Now it returns to its original glory with wood wainscoting, crown molding, wood floors and a marble border.
"Most of this replaced red clay tile that was used in 1913 to hold up the walls," said Staley, who plays a key role on this Ford project though his grandfather worked as a general foreman at Buick making engines. Staley's grandmother went to work in the factory, too, during World War II, building airplane engines.
And Bardelli also has a deeply personal tie to the project.
The Farrugia family at their home near Rosa Parks Boulevard (formerly 12th Street) and Church Street in Corktown. Back row, left to right: Marilyn, Dorothy, baby John, Jane (matriarch), Joseph (patriarch), Joseph and Frank. Front row, left to right: Rose, Harold, Shirley, Agnes, Charles and Antoinette.
The Farrugia family at their home near Rosa Parks Boulevard (formerly 12th Street) and Church Street in Corktown. Back row, left to right: Marilyn, Dorothy, baby John, Jane (matriarch), Joseph (patriarch), Joseph and Frank. Front row, left to right: Rose, Harold, Shirley, Agnes, Charles and Antoinette. Provided By Rich Bardelli
His mother, Rose Farrugia Bardelli, grew up in Corktown. She's Maltese, the heritage of many in what is the oldest neighborhood in Detroit. Farrugia lived at the corner of what is now Rosa Parks Boulevard and Church.
Hundreds of workers at the train station bring family memories, while people all over America have memories of soldiers going off to war from the train station, some never to return.
Brick has been preserved and power-washed, and it looks almost new. Scaffolding lines much of the interior as workers replace marble and plaster throughout. All the original steel has been sandblasted, cleaned, primed and painted.
The wall in the main concourse shows the restoration process of removing the graffiti with only one strip left to remove on this wall at the Michigan Central Station on Jan 11, 2022.
"The ground floor will be restored back to what it looked like originally," Staley said. "We left a couple of spots so that people wouldn't forget what it looked like."