Willow Springs is a BNSF intermodal facility in Hodgkins, Illinois, southwest of Chicago.
The facility’s entrance gate is listed at 7600 Santa Fe Drive, with access to I-294 and I-55, placing it in a major freight corridor for truck-rail transportation near Chicago’s southwest suburbs.
The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway built Willow Springs during the early 1990s as part of its intermodal expansion strategy.
The facility was officially dedicated on September 22, 1994, one year before Santa Fe and Burlington Northern merged to form BNSF.
Willow Springs was designed for expedited intermodal service, including high-priority “Z” trains carrying time-sensitive freight.
The facility is built for fast arriving, unloading, reloading, and departing operations, with four 5,000-foot double-sided tracks that allow inbound units to be unloaded on one side while outbound units are placed for loading on the other.
The terminal was also built to relieve pressure on nearby Corwith, which BNSF described as its busiest terminal at the time.
Today, Willow Springs continues to work closely with Corwith, where trains originate, making coordination between the two terminals important for departure times.
Willow Springs is located next to the UPS Chicago Area Consolidation Hub, one of UPS’s largest sorting and consolidation facilities.
Its proximity to UPS and major expressways helps explain its role in expedited parcel, premium truckload, less-than-truckload, and refrigerated freight movements.
Mid-America Freight Coalition identifies Willow Springs as BNSF’s smallest Chicago intermodal terminal by acreage, at 186 acres, but still a high-volume domestic intermodal facility.
The facility averages about 12 outbound and 11 inbound trains daily, with nine tracks, eight overhead cranes, double concrete ramps, and roughly 1,400 UPS loads per day.
BNSF’s current operation at Willow Springs remains tied to the Santa Fe/BNSF corporate lineage.
Santa Fe built and opened the terminal, and BNSF became the successor operator after the 1995 Burlington Northern-Santa Fe merger.
History of Willow Springs Rail Yard
Willow Springs was developed by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway as a purpose-built intermodal terminal in Hodgkins, Illinois, southwest of Chicago.
The facility was designed to support expedited freight movement, reduce pressure on nearby Corwith, and handle high volumes of trailers and containers moving through BNSF’s Chicago-area network.
After the Santa Fe and Burlington Northern merger, Willow Springs became part of BNSF’s intermodal system.
The timeline of Willow Springs Rail Yard includes:
- Early 1990s: Santa Fe developed Willow Springs as a new intermodal facility serving the Chicago freight market.
- September 22, 1994: The Willow Springs intermodal facility was officially dedicated.
- 1995: Santa Fe and Burlington Northern merged to form BNSF, placing Willow Springs within the BNSF network.
- Late 1990s: Willow Springs became part of BNSF’s expedited intermodal system, working in close coordination with Corwith Yard.
- 2001: Trains Magazine reported high lift volumes at Willow Springs, reflecting the facility’s role in high-throughput intermodal service.
- Modern era: Willow Springs operates as BNSF’s Willow Springs Intermodal Facility in Hodgkins, Illinois, with highway access to I-294 and I-55.
- Current operations: The facility remains a major domestic intermodal terminal with inbound and outbound train activity, overhead cranes, concrete ramps, and significant UPS-related freight volume.
What Railroad Companies Have Operated at Willow Springs Rail Yard?
Willow Springs Rail Yard is closely tied to the Santa Fe and BNSF railroad lineage. The facility was built during the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway era as part of Santa Fe’s expansion of intermodal freight operations in the Chicago region.
After the 1995 merger between Burlington Northern and Santa Fe, the terminal became part of BNSF Railway’s intermodal network.
Today, Willow Springs continues operating as a BNSF intermodal facility within the broader Chicago freight and transportation corridor.
Railroad companies associated with Willow Springs Rail Yard include:
- Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway (Santa Fe): Developed and opened the Willow Springs intermodal facility during the early 1990s.
- Burlington Northern Railroad: Became part of the corporate merger that formed BNSF in 1995.
- BNSF Railway: Current operator of the Willow Springs Intermodal Facility and successor to the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe merger.