Waterfront Station, the main transit terminus in downtown Vancouver, is considered the most haunted building in the city. The station, built in 1914 as the western terminus of the Canadian Pacific Railway, is a grand Beaux-Arts structure that has served as the gateway to Vancouver for over a century. The station's most frequently reported ghosts are three spectral figures who have been seen descending the main staircase toward the old platform area — a woman in 1920s clothing, a man in a fedora, and a figure in railway worker's attire. All three have been described by security guards and late-night commuters, who report the figures moving down the stairs and walking across the empty concourse before vanishing. The station's underground levels, which connect to the SkyTrain system, have also produced reports of cold spots, disembodied voices, and the sensation of being followed through the tunnels. The old ticketing area produces occasional reports of the sound of a typewriter clicking and a telephone ringing. Waterfront Station's location at the edge of the historic Gastown district — Vancouver's oldest neighbourhood, which was devastated by fire in 1886 — connects it to the city's earliest and most turbulent history.