London Paddington station

Paddington
London Paddington
Paddington Station.jpg
Main train shed
Paddington is located in Central London
Paddington

Location of Paddington in Central London
Location Paddington
Local authority City of Westminster
Managed by Network Rail
Station code PAD
Platforms in use 14
Accessible Handicapped/disabled access [1]
Fare zone 1

National Rail annual entry and exit
2002/3 increase 25.263 million[2]
2004/5 increase 25.788 million[2]
2005/6 increase 26.501 million[2]
2006/7 increase 27.259 million[2]
2007/8 decrease 26.521 million[2]
2008/9 increase 32.697 million[2]

4 June 1838 Temporary station opened
29 May 1854 Permanent station opened

List of stations Underground · National Rail
External links DeparturesLayout
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London Transport portal
UK Railways portal

Paddington railway station,[3] also known as London Paddington,[4] is a central London railway terminus and London Underground station complex in the Paddington area of London, England.

The site is a historic one, having served as the London terminus of the Great Western Railway and its successors since 1838. Much of the current mainline station dates from 1854, and was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel. The site was first served by Underground trains in 1863, and was the original western terminus of the Metropolitan Railway, the world's first underground railway.

The complex has recently been modernised, and is now has an additional role as the London terminal for the dedicated Heathrow Express airport service. Paddington is in Travelcard Zone 1.

Contents

Location

The station complex is bounded at the front by Praed Street and at the rear by Bishop's Bridge Road, which crosses the throat of the mainline station on the recently replaced Bishop's Bridge. On the west side of the station is Eastbourne Terrace, while the east side is bounded by the Paddington arm of the Grand Union Canal. The mainline station stands in a shallow cutting, a fact obscured at the front by an hotel building, but which can be clearly seen from the other three sides.[5]

The surrounding area is partly residential, and also includes the major St Mary's Hospital, as well as restaurants and hotels.[5][6]

Until recently there was little office accommodation in the area, so most commuters interchanged between National Rail and the London Underground to reach their destination in the West End or the City. However, recent redevelopment of nearby derelict railway and canal land, marketed as Paddington Waterside, has resulted in a number of new office complexes in the area.[5][6]

Station location map

National Rail station

Paddington Station in Victorian Times

The National Rail station is officially named London Paddington, a name commonly used outside London, but rarely by Londoners. Parts of the station, including the main train shed, date from 1854, when it was built by Isambard Kingdom Brunel as the London terminus for the Great Western Railway (GWR). Today, it is one of 18 UK railway stations managed by Network Rail.[6][7]

History

The first station to open in the Paddington area was a temporary terminus for the GWR on the west side of Bishop's Bridge Road; it opened on 4 June 1838,[8] The first GWR service from London to Taplow, near Maidenhead, began at Paddington in 1838. After the opening of the main station in 1854, this became the site of the goods depot.

The main Paddington station between Bishops Bridge Road and Praed Street was designed by Brunel, who was later commemorated by a statue on the station concourse (it has since been moved to Platform 1, by the exit to the taxi rank), although much of the architectural detailing was by his associate Matthew Digby Wyatt. The station opened on 29 May 1854.[8] The glazed roof is supported by wrought iron arches in three spans, respectively spanning 68 feet (21 m), 102 feet (31 m) and 70 feet (21 m). The roof is 699 feet (210 m) long, and the original roof spans had two transepts connecting the three spans. It is commonly believed that these were provided by Brunel to accommodate traversers to carry coaches between the tracks within the station. However recent research, using early documents and photographs, does not seem to support this belief, and their actual purpose is unknown.[6]

The Great Western Hotel was built on Praed Street in front of the station in 1851-1854 by architect Philip Charles Hardwick, son of Philip Hardwick (designer of the Euston Arch). The station was substantially enlarged in 1906-1915 and a fourth span of 109 feet (33 m) was added on the north side, parallel to the others. The new span was built in a similar style to the original three spans, but the detailing is different and it does not possess the transepts of the earlier spans.[6][9]

The GWR memorial

On Armistice Day 1922, a memorial to the employees of the GWR who died during the First World War was unveiled by Viscount Churchill. The bronze memorial, depicting a soldier reading a letter, was sculpted by Charles Sargeant Jagger and stands on platform 1.[9][10]

In 1961, the decomposing body of a male child was found in a case at the station. Paper stuffed into his mouth was the cause of death. His identity has never been discovered.[11]

A very early construction by Brunel was recently discovered immediately to the north of the station. A cast iron bridge carrying the Bishop's Bridge Road over the Paddington Arm of the Grand Union Canal was uncovered after removal of more recent brick cladding during the complete replacement of the adjacent bridge over the railway lines at the mouth of the station.[6]

Today

Today, Paddington has 14 terminal platforms, numbered 1 to 14 from south-west to north-east (left to right as seen from the main concourse). Platforms 1 to 8 are below the original three spans of Brunel's 1854 train shed, and platforms 9 to 12 are beneath the later fourth span. Platforms 13 and 14 are within the Metropolitan Railway's old Bishop's Road station to the north-west. Immediately alongside are two through platforms, numbered 15 and 16, used by the London Underground's Hammersmith & City and Circle lines (see below).[12]

Platforms 6 and 7 are dedicated to the Heathrow Express, and platforms 13 and 14 can be used only by the 2- and 3-car Turbo trains used on local services. Platforms 1 to 5 and 8 to 12 can be used by any of the station's train services; however, long-distance trains generally use the south-western platforms, and local trains (including Heathrow Connect) the north-eastern ones.

The station concourse stretches across the head of platforms 1 to 12, underneath the London end of the four main train sheds. Platforms 13 and 14 can be reached directly from the northern-western end of platform 12, or from the footbridge which crosses the north-western end of the station and gives access to all platforms.[12]

The area between the rear of the Great Western Hotel and the station concourse is traditionally called The Lawn. It was originally unroofed and occupied by sidings, but was later built up to form part of the station's first pedestrian concourse. The Lawn has recently been re-roofed and separated from the concourse by a glass screen wall. It is now surrounded by shops and cafés on several levels.[6][9]

There are ticket barriers to platforms 2-5 and 10-16.

The fourth span is being renovated, involving the removal of a false ceiling or crash deck dating from the 1990s and repair of the glazed roof, so that platforms 9 to 12 inclusive will once more enjoy daylight. Work is scheduled for completion by the end of 2010.[13]

Services

Paddington is the London terminus for long-distance trains operated by First Great Western, to Bristol, Bath, Gloucester, Exeter and Penzance in the West Country, Hereford and Worcester in the West Midlands, and Newport, Cardiff and Swansea in South Wales. It also acts as the terminus for shorter-distance commuter services to West London and the Thames Valley, also operated by First Great Western. Two services from Paddington serve Heathrow Airport: the Heathrow Express travels non-stop whilst the Heathrow Connect service runs along the same route but calls at most intermediate stations.[14][15] Paddington also serves as an alternative London terminal for Chiltern Railways' service to Birmingham, used when London Marylebone is inaccessible for engineering or other reasons, and for one daily service, High Wycombe-bound only.[16][17]

Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Terminus   First Great Western
Greenford Branch Line
Monday-Saturday Only
  Acton Main Line
Terminus   First Great Western
Great Western Main Line
  Slough
or
Reading
Terminus   First Great Western
Night Riviera
  Reading
Terminus   First Great Western
Commuter services
Great Western Main Line
  Acton Main Line
Ealing Broadway
on Sundays
Terminus   Heathrow Express
Paddington - Heathrow
  Heathrow Central
Terminus   Heathrow Connect
Paddington - Heathrow
  Ealing Broadway
Terminus   Chiltern Railways
London Paddington - High Wycombe
Monday-Friday Only
  Gerrards Cross

London Underground stations

Paddington
Paddington subsurface station building.jpg
Entrance on Praed Street
Location Paddington
Local authority City of Westminster
Managed by London Underground
Platforms in use 6
Fare zone 1

London Underground annual entry and exit
2003 increase 32.453 million[18]
2004 increase 34.444 million[18]
2005 decrease 34.293 million[18]
2006 increase 38.718 million[18]
2007 decrease 37.273 million[18]
2008 increase 40.700 million[18]
2009 increase 42.025 million[18]

1863 Opened (MR, as terminus)
1864 Extension (MR, to Hammersmith)
1868 Opened (MR, to Gloucester Rd)
1913 Opened (Bakerloo, as terminus)
1915 Extension (Bakerloo line)
1926 Started (District line)
1949 Started (Circle line)
1990 Started (Hammersmith & City)
2009 Extension (Circle line to Hammersmith)

List of stations Underground · National Rail
London Transport portal

Paddington station is served by four London Underground lines through two separate stations: the Bakerloo, Circle and District lines serve a combined sub-surface and deep-level station to the south of the main line station, and the Hammersmith & City and Circle lines serve a sub-surface station to the north. Circle line services are routed through each of the sub-surface stations as part of a spiral route. Although shown on the London Underground map as a single station,[19] the two sub-surface parts are not directly linked.

Ticket barriers control access to all platforms.

History

The first underground railway station at Paddington was opened as Paddington (Bishop's Road) by the Metropolitan Railway (MR) on 10 January 1863 as the terminus of the company's route from Farringdon. The station was to the north of the main line station and, from 13 June 1864, MR services were extended westward via a connection to the GWR's Hammersmith branch, now the Hammersmith & City line.[20]

On 1 October 1868, the MR opened a branch to Gloucester Road, with a station called Paddington (Praed Street) in a cut-and-cover tunnel under that street south of the mainline station. The deep-level Baker Street and Waterloo Railway (now the Bakerloo line) station opened on 1 December 1913 as a temporary terminus of an extension from Edgware Road to Queen's Park.[20]

Services around the circuit of the Circle line were originally shared by the MR and the Metropolitan District Railway and were separately identified specifically as the Circle line in 1949. Hammersmith & City line services were originally operated as part of the MR (later the Metropolitan line) and were separately identified as the Hammersmith & City line in 1990.[20]

The platforms of the Bishop's Road station are still quite separate from the other Underground platforms, and were until the September 2009 revision of the Underground map shown as a separate station on the tube map. They are similar to the mainline platforms alongside them, and are numbered (15 and 16) in the same sequence as the mainline platforms. Interchange between the Praed Street/Bakerloo Line and Bishop's Road platforms involves walking the length of the mainline station outside the London Underground barrier lines, although the ticket barriers are programmed to permit changing between the two stations as part of a single journey.

Services

Hammersmith & City line trains run between Hammersmith and Barking stations. Circle line trains run in a spiral-shaped loop from Hammersmith to Paddington (Bishop's Road), then clockwise around the circle line's circuit via Aldgate and Paddington (Praed Street), to terminate at Edgware Road. District line services run between Wimbledon and Edgware Road, and Bakerloo line trains run between Elephant & Castle and Harrow & Wealdstone stations.[19]

Preceding station   London Underground   Following station
    Praed Street    
Warwick Avenue
towards Harrow & Wealdstone
Bakerloo line
Edgware Road (deep level)
Deep tube station
towards Elephant & Castle
Bayswater
towards Hammersmith (via Victoria)
Circle line
Edgware Road
Subsurface station
Terminus
Bayswater
towards Wimbledon
District line
    Bishop's Bridge Road    
Royal Oak
towards Hammersmith
Hammersmith & City line
Edgware Road
towards Barking
Circle line
Edgware Road
towards Edgware Road (via Aldgate)

Crossrail station

Between 2009 and 2015,[21] a new Crossrail station will be built under London Paddington, serving as a connection to the National Rail and London Underground services. Services are due to start in 2017.[22]

Future Development
Preceding station   Crossrail   Following station
Acton Main Line
towards Maidenhead or Heathrow Airport
Crossrail
Line 1
Bond Street
towards Abbey Wood or Shenfield

Paddington station in fiction

Statue of Paddington Bear

The children's book character Paddington Bear was named after the station. In the books, by Michael Bond, he is found at the station, having come from "deepest, darkest Peru" and with a note attached to his coat reading "please look after this bear, thank you". A statue of Paddington Bear by Marcus Cornish, based on the original drawings by Peggy Fortnum, is located on the station concourse, and a small shop stocks Paddington Bear paraphernalia in the main station area.[9][23]

The mystery novel 4.50 From Paddington (1952) by Agatha Christie begins with a murder witnessed by a passenger on a train from Paddington station.[24]

One of The Railway Series books (The Eight Famous Engines) has a story in it about Gordon, Duck, and a foreign engine debating which station London is. Duck says that he used to work at London Paddington as a station pilot so he thinks Paddington is most important. However, Gordon later finds out that the station in London is St. Pancras.

There is an underground Paddington Station, separate from the real one, on the North London System in the novel The Horn of Mortal Danger (1980).[25]

Transport links

London bus routes 7, 15, 23, 27, 36, 46, 205, 332, 436 and Night routes N7 and N15.

Gallery

References

  1. "London and South East". Rail Map for People with Reduced Mobility. National Rail. September 2006. http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/system/galleries/download/mobility_maps/LondonSouthEast.pdf. Retrieved 1 January 2010. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 "Station usage". Rail statistics. Office of Rail Regulation. 12 March 2009. http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/server/show/nav.1529. Retrieved 19 January 2010. 
  3. "Stations Run by Network Rail". Network Rail. http://www.networkrail.co.uk/aspx/765.aspx. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 
  4. "Station Codes". National Rail. http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/stations/codes/. Retrieved 2009-08-23. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 "Paddington Station Planning Brief" (PDF). Westminster City Council. April 2009. http://www3.westminster.gov.uk/docstores/publications_store/BriefMar08redraft2.pdf. Retrieved 2008-07-28. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 Brindle, Steven (2004). Paddington Station: Its history and architecture. English Heritage. ISBN 1-873592-70-1. 
  7. "Station Facilities for London Paddington". Association of Train Operating Companies. http://nrekb.nationalrail.co.uk/stations/PAD.html. Retrieved 9 June 2006. 
  8. 8.0 8.1 Butt, R.V.J. (1995). The Directory of Railway Stations. Yeovil: Patrick Stephens. p. 180. R508. ISBN 1 85260 508 1. 
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 "Architectural mini guide - Paddington" (PDF). Network Rail. http://www.networkrail.co.uk/documents/3053_PaddingtonArchitecturalMiniGuide.pdf. Retrieved 2008-07-28. 
  10. "'Great Western Railway War Memorial'". from The Great Western Railway Magazine, December 1922, pp. 537-40. 1922, reproduced November 2001. http://www.york.ac.uk/inst/irs/irshome/features/readings/archive/remembrance.htm#EX04. Retrieved 2007-07-09. 
  11. "A Time Line for Policing the Railways". British Transport Police. http://www.btp.police.uk/History%20Society/Publications/History%20Society/The%20history/A%20Time%20Line%20for%20Policing%20the%20Railways%201950%20-%201979.htm. Retrieved 20 September 2006. 
  12. 12.0 12.1 "Paddington - Station Guide" (PDF). Network Rail. http://www.networkrail.co.uk/documents/For%20Passengers/Station%20Maps/4509_Paddington%20Station%20Map.pdf. Retrieved 2008-07-30. 
  13. Clark, Rhodri (June 2010). "Western station improvements". Modern Railways (London): p. 66. 
  14. "Our Company". Heathrow Express. https://www.heathrowexpress.com/content.asp?SID={F7A5215E-07AE-4BCD-A09B-9FC1EE00CD75}&pageid=27. Retrieved 2008-08-02. 
  15. "Welcome". Heathrow Connect. http://www.heathrowconnect.com/. Retrieved 2008-08-02. 
  16. "Train Times 13 December 2009 to 22 May 2010". Chiltern Railways. December 2009. p. 29. http://www.chilternrailways.co.uk/downloads/31730.4/december-2009-full-timetable.pdf. Retrieved 28 March 2010. "Mondays to Fridays London Paddington 1136 Gerrards Cross 1203 ... High Wycombe 1219" 
  17. "Table 115 Mondays to Fridays London → High Wycombe, Aylesbury, Banbury, Stratford-upon-Avon, Birmingham Snow Hill and Kidderminster". Current Timetables Electronic National Rail Timetable (eNRT). Network Rail. December 2009. p. 1375. http://www.networkrail.co.uk/browse%20documents/eNRT/Dec09/timetables/Table115.pdf. Retrieved 28 March 2010. 
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 18.3 18.4 18.5 18.6 "Customer metrics: entries and exits". London Underground performance update. Transport for London. 2003-2009. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/tfl/corporate/modesoftransport/tube/performance/default.asp?onload=entryexit. Retrieved 22 May 2010. 
  19. 19.0 19.1 "Standard Tube Map" (PDF). Transport for London. December 2009. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloads/standard-tube-map.pdf. Retrieved 2009-12-23. 
  20. 20.0 20.1 20.2 Rose, Douglas (1999) [1980]. The London Underground, A Diagrammatic History. Douglas Rose/Capital Transport. ISBN 1-85414-219-4. 
  21. "Orders of the Day — Crossrail Bill". TheyWorkForYou.com. 19 July 2005. http://www.theyworkforyou.com/debate/?id=2005-07-19.1136.2. Retrieved 2007-03-23. .
  22. "London Crossrail gets the go-ahead". Railway Gazette International (London). 5 October 2007. http://www.railwaygazette.com/news_view/article/2007/10/7798/london_crossrail_gets_the_go_ahead.html. 
  23. "How It All Started". paddingtonbear.co.uk. http://www.paddingtonbear.co.uk/en/1/fachismbohow.mxs. Retrieved 2008-07-28. 
  24. Christie, Agatha (1957). 4.50 From Paddington. Harper Collins. ISBN 9780007208548. 
  25. Leonard, Lawrence (1980). The Horn of Mortal Danger. Cox and Wyman. ISBN 0-7445-0847-9. 

External links