Excellent photos, Bedhead. I like the way you captured the hurried movement of travelers in the last ones.
It seems many of the stations overseas have great, spacious trainsheds with natural light. It's a stark contrast with most of ours in the US; dank, dark, low-ceilinged caves with grimy raw-concrete platforms that haven't seen a pressure washer in years, and dirty, litter-strewn track pits. US passenger rail is such a dismal joke, and even with dramatically-growing public demand and a supportive administration (at last!), there's a lot of strident political opposition to trying to bring it up to the standards maintained in many other countries.
For your viewing pleasure, may I present the 1911 Chicago Northwestern Station. It was razed and replaced by Ogilvie Transportation Center, a giant mirrored-glass jukebox, in 1984. I took this photo about 1980 on an unpleasant winter day; the original is a 35mm slide, Kodachrome, I think.