Crystal Palace railway station

This article is about the open Low Level station. For the disused High Level station, see Crystal Palace (High Level) railway station.
Crystal Palace London Overground National Rail
Crystal Palace
Location of Crystal Palace in Greater London
Location Crystal Palace
Local authority London Borough of Bromley
Managed by London Overground
Owner Network Rail
Station code CYP
DfT category D
Number of platforms 6
Accessible Yes Ramp required between train and platform. [1]
Fare zone 3 and 4
Cycle parking Yes - external
Toilet facilities Yes - behind gateline
National Rail annual entry and exit
2004–05 Increase 0.905 million[2]
2005–06 Increase 1.038 million[2]
2006–07 Increase 1.467 million[2]
2007–08 Increase 1.671 million[2]
2008–09 Decrease 1.620 million[2]
2009–10 Increase 1.627 million[2]
2010–11 Increase 1.869 million[2]
2011–12 Increase 2.126 million[2]
— interchange 0.575 million[2]
2012–13 Increase 2.202 million[2]
— interchange Decrease 0.564 million[2]
2013–14 Increase 2.474 million[2]
— interchange Decrease 0.386 million[2]
Key dates
10 June 1854 Opened (Crystal Palace)
1856 Through station
1 November 1898 Renamed (Crystal Palace Low Level)
13 June 1955 Renamed (Crystal Palace)
Other information
Lists of stations
External links
London Transport portal
UK Railways portalCoordinates: 51°25′06″N 0°04′21″W / 51.4182°N 0.0726°W / 51.4182; -0.0726

Crystal Palace railway station is in the London Borough of Bromley in south London. It is located in the Anerley area between the town centres of Crystal Palace and Penge. It is one of two stations built to serve the site of the 1851 exhibition building, the Crystal Palace, when it was moved from Hyde Park to Sydenham Hill after 1851.

The station was opened on 10 June 1854 by the West End of London and Crystal Palace Railway (WEL&CPR) to take the crowds to the relocated Palace. It was formerly known as Crystal Palace (Low Level) to differentiate it from the nearby and now demolished Crystal Palace (High Level) railway station.

The station serves trains running between London Bridge and London Victoria in addition to services terminating at Beckenham Junction and Sutton. Since 23 May 2010, the station has also been a terminus of the East London Line section of the London Overground. This has been the catalyst for plans for a substantial redevelopment of the station.

History

A 1908 Railway Clearing House map of lines around the Crystal Palace railway station, as well as surrounding lines

From the outset trains were operated by the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway (LBSCR). Initially the station was the terminus of a spur line from Sydenham. In 1856 the station was able to take through train services to Clapham Junction via West Norwood and Streatham Hill, following the completion of the 746 yard (690 m) Crystal Palace Tunnel. Although relatively short, the tunnel was regarded as a major engineering achievement as it was cut "through the same treacherous material [clay], through the hill on which the Crystal Palace stands, and immediately under one of the great water towers, a superincumbent weight of 2,200 tons which taxed in its execution all the skill and workmanship of the eminent contractors."[3]

In 1857, an eastward connection was made to Norwood Junction (for the Brighton line to the south) and in 1858 the WEL&CPR was extended as far as Beckenham. From 1860 direct services were available from London Victoria.

The frontage of the station was rebuilt in 1875, and was described: "Although the Roman Catholic chapel room is no longer used the station still has a cathedral-like atmosphere as one passes from the period booking hall to the vault-like station and the stairs down to the original station area".[4]

This is a description of the station trainshed roof above the staircases at the west end. However, the rest of the station has no shelter from the elements between the vast brick retaining walls. Originally the whole length of the platforms beyond the bottom of the massive staircases was covered by an elegant dual bow-spring arch iron roof. This was removed as a precautionary measure shortly after the collapse of the similar structure at Charing Cross in 1905.

In 1905-08, Crystal Palace station was included in a proposal for an unusual new form of underground railway, the Kearney High-Speed Tube, devised by the Australian-born engineer Elfric Wells Chalmers Kearney. He envisaged the construction of a tunnel which would run from Crystal Palace to Cricklewood in north-west London, with a branch line terminating at Strand. It was to be operated with an unusual monorail system patented by Kearney which would be powered by gravity, like a type of underground roller coaster. Kearney failed to attract support for his scheme and the line was never built.[5]

The line was electrified between Balham and Crystal Palace on 12 May 1911, using the LBSCR overhead system, in time for the Festival of Empire coinciding with the coronation of King George V. Electric trains from Victoria were advertised to complete the journey in fifteen minutes - a running time that has never been equalled.

The station is built on the junction of two lines: the original station platforms lying on the Sydenham route, and the later platforms on the southern spur to Norwood Junction and Beckenham Junction.

Following the fire in 1936 which destroyed the Crystal Palace passenger numbers fell and most services through the station were diverted to serve London-Croydon routes rather than running along the London Bridge-Victoria loop. The southern platforms became the busier pair and the entrance to the station was moved to the south side of the building in the 1980s. A glazed ticket hall, which echoed the profile of the Crystal Palace with its arched roof structure, was constructed at this time on the southern flank of the Victorian building.

The two outer bay platforms, which were used by terminating trains, were abandoned in the 1970s and the third rail was removed, although the track and buffers were left in place. The southern bay was brought back into use in May 2010 as part of the East London Line development.

The original station was partially refurbished in 2002 by Railtrack at a cost of £4 million. This included a substantial amount of work on the roof of the building and refurbishment of office space on the top floor.

Station redevelopment for East London Line

To accommodate the additional East London Line services, and to provide disabled access to all platforms of the station, substantial works were required at the station. A planning application was submitted to Bromley Council in February 2009, for alterations to the Victorian booking hall building, removal of the current ticket office, removal of the pedestrian bridge over platforms 1 and 2 and new stairs to platform 1, but funding constraints meant that this work had not started before East London Line services started calling at the station in 2010.

London Overground trains terminate in either the southern (formerly disused) bay platform 3, or a new bay platform 5, part of the new central platform which has been built over the site of the removed sidings, in the centre of the old station. The two through lines serve platform 4 (previously platform 3) and platform 6, the north side face of the new central island. The former platform 4 is no longer in public use, and while at the time of the East London Line service commencing it still had its platform furniture and information displays, these have since been removed.

Refurbishment work funded by Transport for London started in 2012. The original Victorian booking hall was reopened on 24 September 2012[6] along with a new cafe in an adjacent part of the station building. The 1980s booking hall addition was demolished in October 2012.

Three lifts have been installed to improve accessibility within the station. These give access to all platforms - there are two levels below the refurbished Victorian ticket hall. Refurbishment and improvement works were completed on 26 March 2013.[7]

Transport for London were also proposing to extend Tramlink from Harrington Road through Anerley to the bus station on Crystal Palace Parade, with three possible routes.[8] However, Mayor Boris Johnson cancelled the £170 million project in November 2008.[9]

Transport links

London Buses route 157, 249, 358, 410, 432 and night route N3.

Services

The 1980s booking office and station entrance, designed to imitate the central section of the Crystal Palace, was demolished in October 2012 following the reopening of the original Victorian entrance
London Overground train at Crystal Palace

Regular train services which serve Crystal Palace today comprise four different routes:

Alternative routes run at peak hours, and on Sundays route 2 listed above does not run while services on route 3 terminate at this station. On Mondays-Fridays late evenings route 1 listed above is also extended to Epsom and Epsom Downs.

The London Overground services to Highbury & Islington also run in the late evenings and on holidays.

Preceding station   London Overground   Following station
East London LineTerminus
National Rail
Sydenham   Southern
London Bridge to London Victoria
  Gipsy Hill
Birkbeck   Southern
London Bridge to Beckenham Junction
(via Crystal Palace)

(Monday-Saturday)
 
Norwood Junction   Southern
London Victoria to Sutton
(via Crystal Palace)
 

See also

References

  1. "Crystal Palace (CYP)". National Rail Enquiries website. National Rail. Retrieved 3 September 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 "Station usage estimates". Rail statistics. Office of Rail Regulation. Please note: Some methodology may vary year on year.
  3. Illustrated London News, 1 November 1856
  4. Railways of the Southern Region (PSL Field Guide, Geoffrey Body, 1984))
  5. Badsey-Ellis, Antony (2005). London's lost tube schemes. Harrow: Capital Transport. pp. 257–263. ISBN 1-85414-293-3.
  6. Crystal Palace Train station restored - This is Croydon 28 September 2012
  7. "Crystal Palace refurbishment complete". Transport for London website. Transport for London. Retrieved 3 September 2013.
  8. "Croydon Tramlink extension". Transport for London. Transport for London. Archived from the original on 16 March 2007. Retrieved 3 September 2013.

External links

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