Rail executives and Utah lawmakers gathered for a ribbon-cutting of the intermodal rail facility, part of the long-planned inland port project.
(Chris Samuels | The Salt Lake Tribune) Officials and guests cut a ribbon during the opening of a BNSF intermodal facility in Salt Lake City, Thursday, July 31, 2025.
A new railroad facility, welcoming freight trains carrying goods from California into Utah, had its grand opening Wednesday — an event that had state officials evoking the history of the Transcontinental Railroad and the prospect of the 2034 Winter Olympics.
Thursday’s ribbon-cutting ceremony for a 43-acre intermodal rail facility, bringing together the massive BNSF Railway with Utah’s Patriot Rail, also marked a milestone in the development of Utah’s long-in-development inland port project.
The facility is located five miles west of Salt Lake City International Airport and off the I-80 corridor, at 6199 W. North Temple.
Business and political leaders at Thursday’s ceremony — with an orange BNSF locomotive as a backdrop — said they believe the intermodal facility will become a hub for freight transportation that will increase city and state economies, raise export chances for urban manufacturers and rural producers and transform the supply chain in the West.
Abby Osborne, chair of the Utah Inland Port Authority, said the project required a “bold shared vision” among BNSF, Patriot Rail and the port authority, and the result is a “great solution tailored to Utah’s future.”
(Chris Samuels | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Inland Port Authority chair Abby Osborne makes remarks during the opening of a BNSF intermodal facility in Salt Lake City, Thursday, July 31, 2025.
Tom Williams, executive vice president of BNSF — one of North America’s largest freight transportation companies — said the company and its partners consider the rail facility a way to enhance supply chain solutions for Salt Lake City, while also reducing carbon emissions.
“[Carbon emission] savings [will] come from converting freight from the highway and taking trucks and moving them to the rail,” Williams said.
Brandy Christian, Patriot Rail’s CEO, said “this has been a vision that has been over a decade in the making, and it truly is a pivotal moment for the state of Utah.”
(Chris Samuels | The Salt Lake Tribune) Patriot Rail CEO Brandy Christian makes remarks during the opening of a BNSF intermodal facility in Salt Lake City, Thursday, July 31, 2025.
The rail facility, Christian said, “really enhances the competitiveness of this market and your place in freight logistics.”
Utah House Speaker Mike Schultz recalled a conversation he had years ago with his predecessor, Greg Hughes, about the still-proposed inland port.
Hughes introduced Schultz to the idea of 11-hour service areas — circles that mark how far goods can be transported in 11 hours, via truck or rail. Utah’s circle, Schultz said, covered “the largest population area in the nation.”
“Utah loves businesses. Utah loves manufacturing. Utah loves logistics, and we love to build infrastructure in Utah,” Schultz said. “So, this fits right up our alley.”
Utah Senate President Stuart Adams said the rail facility “is a big deal for Utah because it’ll empower empower our communities. It’ll boost our economy and enhance our long-term competitiveness.”
According to 2025 data complied by the American Legislative Exchange Council, a conservative nonprofit, Utah ranks top in the country for economic outlook and third for its economic performance.
Adams cited Utah’s reputation as “the crossroads of the West,” and added that the state is a place that could extend its exports of “life sciences, agriculture and retail” to the rest of the world.
(Chris Samuels | The Salt Lake Tribune) A train engine is parked at a BNSF intermodal facility in Salt Lake City, Thursday, July 31, 2025.
“The story of rail in Utah isn’t finished. In fact, I believe it’s just begun,” Adams said, comparing Thursday’s event to the 1869 driving of the Golden Spike in Promontory, Utah, marking the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad.
Gov. Spencer Cox told those attending Thursday’s ceremony that the excitement over the new facility was comparable to what he felt when the International Olympic Committee announced Salt Lake City would host the 2034 Winter Games.
The project, Cox said, a perfect example of how Utahns love to build.
“It’s also about Utah families. It’s about Utah workers,” Cox said. “It’s about our neighborhoods, and it’s certainly about our future. Smart infrastructure like this improves daily lives for every Utahn. It means lower costs at the grocery store, more reliable delivery of critical goods, and a stronger economy rooted right here in our own backyard.”