Government Center station is an intermodal transit hub in the Government Center district of Downtown Miami, Florida. Operated by Miami-Dade Transit, it serves as a transfer station for the Metrorail rapid transit and Metromover people mover systems, and as a bus station for Miami's Metrobus and, during weekday rush hours, Broward County Transit buses. The station is connected via a pedestrian bridge over NW 3rd Street to the southern end of MiamiCentral and is directly linked to the Stephen P. Clark Government Center Building. It opened on May 20, 1984, adjacent to the site of a former Florida East Coast Railway station.
Development of the civic center was reinvigorated during the 1970s and early 1980s amid a Downtown building boom, which led to the construction of the Stephen P. Clark Government Center, Metrorail, Metromover, and the Miami-Dade Cultural Plaza, home to HistoryMiami and the Miami-Dade Public Library System Main Library.
Construction on the present-day Government Center station began in June 1982. The station was designed by Cambridge Seven Associates in collaboration with Edward D. Stone and built by the Frank J. Rooney Construction Company. Metrorail service between Overtown and Kendall commenced in May 1984, following the former Florida East Coast Railway route.
An unused, partially completed "ghost platform" for a future East-West Metrorail line is located on the mezzanine level below the current Metrorail platform, visible to passengers transferring from Metromover. This platform was part of the original design concept interfacing with the atrium of the Miami-Dade County Administration Building and the Metromover station.
The station is adjacent to the former site of a railroad station built in April 1896 as the southern terminus of Henry Flagler's Florida East Coast Railway (FEC). The terminal was demolished by November 1963. The FEC retained ownership of the site, which was used as parking lots until 2014. It is now MiamiCentral, an intermodal hub served by Brightline higher-speed inter-city trains since 2018 and Tri-Rail commuter trains since 2024.
The second floor contains the main Metrorail fare control area, Metromover platforms, and the Metrofare Shops retail area.
The third floor serves as a mezzanine for transfers between Metrorail and Metromover, includes the unused eastâÂÂwest "ghost platform," and features a pedestrian bridge connecting directly to the southern end of MiamiCentral for Brightline and Tri-Rail passengers.
The fourth floor houses the Metrorail platform, the highest in the Miami-Dade Transit system, capable of accommodating up to eight-car trains.