Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Tube Heritage
St John's Wood Station - The signs say "Bakerloo Line" because originally it was on the Stanmore Branch of the Bakerloo Line which joined the other branch at Baker Street.
St John's Wood escalators 1939
Arnos Grove Station
Sixteen Tube stations were today granted Grade II listed status to protect their architectural heritage. The stations include Oxford Circus, Covent Garden, Aldwych and St John's Wood. The grading will protect station facades, including 100-year-old ornate tiling and brickwork, but allow internal changes for safety measures. Simon Thurley, English Heritage chief executive, said: "They are as valuable to London's architectural story as many more famous buildings like the Houses of Parliament."
Sudbury Town station
The stations include several designed by Leslie Green and have historic and architectural significance, illustrating the development of the capital's transport system as well as pioneering the use of a strong image which is recognised around the world.
Cockfosters Station
The stations given Grade II status are:
• Aldwych
• Belsize Park
• Brent Cross
• Caledonian Road
Caledonian Road
• Chalk Farm
• Chesham
• Covent Garden
• Hendon Central
• Oxford Circus (originally two separate stations on the north-west corner of Argyll Street and Oxford Street, and the north-east corner of Argyll Street and Oxford Street including the office above)
• Perivale
• Redbridge
• Russell Square
• St John's Wood
• West Acton
• Wood Green
Three other stations have had their listing upgraded from Grade II to Grade II*. They are:
• Arnos Grove
• Oakwood
• Sudbury Town
The listed stations include several of the tube stations designed by Leslie Green whose ‘ox-blood’ red tile facades, pioneered the use of a strong and consistent corporate image that’s recognised around the world. All the stations have historic and architectural significance, illustrating the development of the capital’s Underground system.
Arnos Grove ticket hall with Passimeter
Escalators with bronze uplighters
The Directors of London Underground in the 20s and 30s saw good design as good for business. By the example it set under Frank Pick the Underground was gradually able to change the public’s attitude to railway stations which had been seen as shabby and inhospitable places. Sir Nicholas Pevsner wrote that Pick saw in every detail a “visual propaganda” and he used this not only to improve the Underground but the environment as a whole. Charles Holden brought the Underground station to the forefront of modern architecture: This achievement is unequalled by any other transport company before or since.
As the Guardian Newspaper's Architectural correspondent (and former London Transport management trainee) Jonathan Glancey observed;
“The first of Charles Holden's tube stations for Frank Pick was Sudbury Town, on the Piccadilly line, opened in 1931. There had been nothing like this distinctly modern yet well-crafted building in Britain before. With typical modesty, Holden, a retiring, teetotal, vegetarian Quaker draper's son from Bolton, Lancashire, chose to describe his first modern masterpiece as "a brick box with a concrete lid. Possibly, just possibly, Holden meant something more.
I can't help thinking that this truly great and still under-rated English architect was thinking of Inigo Jones (1573-1652), who had instigated a revolution in British architecture in the reign of James I when he designed the country's first truly classical buildings. When his client Francis Russell, Earl of Bedford, asked Jones to add a chapel "as cheap as a barn" to his smart residential development built around the new Covent Garden piazza, the architect replied "then you shall have the handsomest barn in England". Sudbury Town station is surely transport design's equivalent of St Paul's, Covent Garden.”
Covent Garden Station 1907
“Tube stations are great examples of the capital’s hidden heritage,” said Heritage Minister John Penrose. “Although listing does not mean these stations will remain unchanged for all time, it does mean that any redevelopment plans will have to take the sites’ heritage value into account, which seems entirely right and will ensure the best of design is preserved for the future.”
55, Broadway - London Underground's iconic HQ built in 1929 in the "airspace" above St. James's Park Station
For more on the architect Charles Holden see;
http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2010/11/holden-goes-underground.html
For more on London Underground’s Grade 1 listed iconic HQ, 55, Broadway, see;
http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2008/04/give-my-regards-to-55-broadway.html
For the history of London Underground and one of the world’s Great Railway Journeys see;
http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2008/01/great-circle-line-journey.html
Though we take it for granted, and frequently curse it to high heaven, the London Underground is a wonder. The Tube network is the oldest and longest underground railway system serving a major city. Its history goes back to 1863, its conception even earlier.
http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2009/10/londons-wunderground.html
Aldwych Tube Station with the tiling showing the original name "Strand"
People in London also used tube stations during the Blitz. They would buy a platform tickets and camp on the platforms for the night. Sheltering in the tube was popular because it was dry, warm and quiet down there. The government was afraid that the overcrowded platforms would disrupt the movement of troops and tried to stop the public from using the tube stations as shelters. The people refused to give them up and the government was forced to back down. In some cases underground stations were closed down and given over to the public to use during air raids.
For the unique place which is Aldwych Tube Station and its role in the Blitz see;
http://daithaic.blogspot.com/2010/11/blitz-on-underground.html
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