Charing Cross tube station
is a London Underground station
at Charing
Cross
in the City of Westminster
with entrances located in Trafalgar
Square
and Strand
.
The
station is served by the Northern and
Bakerloo lines and provides an
interchange with the National Rail
network at Charing Cross station
. On the Northern Line it is between Embankment
and Leicester Square
stations on the Charing Cross branch, and on the
Bakerloo Line it is between Embankment
and Piccadilly Circus
stations. It is in
Travelcard Zone 1.
The station was formerly also served by the
Jubilee Line between 1979 and 1999; acting as
the southern terminus of the line during that period.
For most of the history of the Underground the name
Charing
Cross was associated not with this station but with the
station now known as
Embankment. See below for the complex
history of the name.
History
The Northern line and Bakerloo line parts of the station were
originally opened as two separate stations and were combined when
the now defunct Jubilee Line platforms were opened. The constituent
stations also underwent a number of name changes during their
history.
The first part of the complex, the Bakerloo line platforms, were
opened as
Trafalgar Square by the
Baker Street & Waterloo
Railway (BS&WR) on
10 March
1906.
The Northern line platforms were opened as
Charing Cross
by the
Charing Cross,
Euston & Hampstead Railway (CCE&HR, now the Charing
Cross branch of the Northern line) on
22
June 1907.
At its opening this station was the
southern terminus of the CCE&HR which ran to two northern
termini at Golders Green
and Highgate (now Archway
) tube stations.
Although both lines were owned and operated by the
Underground Electric
Railways Company (UERL), there was no direct connection below
ground and passengers interchanging between the lines had to do so
via two sets of lifts and the surface.
In an effort to improve interchange capabilities, the CCE&HR
was extended the short distance south under Charing Cross main line
station to connect with the BS&WR and the
District Railway (another UERL line), opening as such on
6 April 1914. The
interchange station between the BS&WR and District had been
know hitherto as
Charing Cross (District) and
Embankment (BS&WR). The original CCE&HR terminus
to the north of Charing Cross main line station was renamed
Charing Cross (Strand) and the new station and the
BS&WR station to the south of the main line station was named
Charing Cross (Embankment). These names lasted only a
short time: on
9 May 1915,
Charing Cross (Strand) was renamed
Strand and for
Charing Cross (Embankment) the tube lines adopted the
District Railway name of
Charing Cross.
At the same time, the
separate Strand station on the Great
Northern, Piccadilly and Brompton Railway was also renamed
Aldwych
to avoid confusion.
The Northern line Strand station was closed on
4
June 1973 to enable the construction of the
new Jubilee line platforms. These platforms were constructed
between the Bakerloo line and Northern line platforms together with
the long missing below ground interchange between those two lines.
In anticipation of the new interchange station, from
4 August 1974 Charing
Cross was renamed
Charing Cross Embankment. The
Jubilee line platforms and the refurbished Northern Line platforms
opened on
1 May 1979 from
which date the combined station including Trafalgar Square was
given its current name; simultaneously
Charing Cross
Embankment reverted to the original BS&WR name of
Embankment, ending 109 years of association with the name
Charing Cross.
Although
Charing Cross was constructed as the southern terminus of the
Jubilee line, plans already existed to continue the line to the
east towards Lewisham
in south-east London. The tunnels were,
therefore constructed beyond the station beneath Strand as far as
143 Strand, almost as far as Aldwych station which would have been
the next stop on the line.
The subsequent regeneration of the Docklands
in London's East End
during the 1980s and 1990s required additional
transport infrastructure and the eventual route of the extension
took the new tunnels south from Green Park
to provide new interchanges at Westminster
, Waterloo
and London Bridge
stations and then on to Greenwich
and Stratford
.
The new tunnels branch away from the original south of Green Park
station and, on the opening of the final section of the line
between Green Park and Waterloo stations on
20 November 1999, the
Jubilee Line platforms at Charing Cross were closed to the
travelling public. The
escalators
continuing down to the closed platforms can, however, still be seen
through closed doors at the bottom of the escalators from the
ticket hall.
Design
A 100 metre-long mural along the Northern line platforms was
designed by
David Gentleman.
It shows
scenes from the funeral journey of Eleanor of Castile (the wife
of Edward I) from Nottinghamshire
to her tomb in Westminster Abbey
(see Eleanor
cross).
Former Jubilee line platforms
Although now closed to the public, the Jubilee Line platforms of
Charing Cross station are still maintained by TfL for use by film
and television makers needing a modern Underground station
location. While still open they were used in the 1987 film
The Fourth
Protocol, and after closure in numerous productions,
including different episodes of the television series
Spooks, the films
Creep (2004),
28 Weeks Later (2007),
The Deaths of Ian Stone (2007)
and the video for the
Alex Parks's single
"
Cry".
In 2006,
it was proposed that an extension to
the Docklands Light Railway
from Bank
station
would take over the platforms. Intermediate stations
at Aldwych tube
station
and City Thameslink
would be opened, mirroring the planned route of the
old Fleet Line.
Nearby places of interest
See also
References
External links