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Angel tube station

 
Wikipedia: Angel tube station
Angel
Angel station entrance.JPG
Entrance on Upper Street
Angel is located in Central London
Angel

Location of Angel in Central London
Location The Angel, Islington
Local authority London Borough of Islington
Managed by London Underground
Platforms in use 2
Fare zone 1
LUL 2005 usage 14.03 million[1]
LUL 2007 usage 16.626 million[1]
LUL 2008 usage 17.82 million[1]

1901 (1901) Opened

List of stations Underground · National Rail

Coordinates: 51°31′55″N 0°06′22″W / 51.532°N 0.106°W / 51.532; -0.106

Angel tube station is a London Underground station in The Angel, Islington. It is on the Bank branch of the Northern Line, between Old Street and King's Cross St. Pancras stations. It is in Travelcard Zone 1.

Angel station was originally built by the City & South London Railway, and opened in 1901 as the northern terminus of a new extension from Moorgate. It is one of five stations on the London Underground named after a public house - in this case the once-famous Angel inn, which dates back to at least 1638. As with many other stations on the line, it was originally built with a single central island platform serving two tracks – an arrangement still seen at Clapham North and Clapham Common – and access from street level was via lifts. The most recent lifts were of the Otis "drum hoist" design used throughout the rest of the tube system, but were of about half the size. For years, the station regularly suffered from congestion and overcrowding which, especially with the island platform, constituted a major safety issue. Consequently, the station was comprehensively rebuilt, re-opening in 1992.

A new section of tunnel was excavated for a new northbound platform and the southbound platform was rebuilt to completely occupy the original 30-foot tunnel, explaining why it is larger than most deep-level platforms. The lifts and the ground level building originally on the corner of Torrens Street and City Road were closed and a new station entrance was opened around the corner in Islington High Street. Because of the distance of the new entrance from the platforms, and their depth, two flights of escalators were required aligned approximately at a right-angle.

The tube stop serves as a portal to several Off West End, or fringe theatre, venues, including The King's Head Theatre and Almeida Theatre.

Between Angel and Old Street stations is the disused City Road tube station.

Contents

Future

Angel is a proposed station on the Chelsea-Hackney line project. It would be between King's Cross St Pancras and Essex Road. It was officially safeguarded as part of the route in 2007.[2][3] This would therefore provide an interchange between the two London Underground lines.

Trivia

  • Angel station is the subject of The Heart of the Angel, an award-winning 1989 BBC "40 minutes" documentary, by Molly Dineen. It shows the troubled life of the station a few years before the 1992 rebuilding, including the platform overcrowding and the lifts regularly breaking down.
  • Angel station is one of the most popular stations in terms of merchandising.[citation needed]
  • In March 2007, an unidentified individual posted a video on YouTube of Andreas Håtveit skiing down the escalator (reportedly sometime in 2006), an action condemned by the Metropolitan Police and London Underground officials.[4][5]
  • The station contains the longest single escalator rise in western Europe.[6]

Layout

Northern line

Northbound towards Edgware, High Barnet or Mill Hill East
Northbound Platform 2
Island Platform
Southbound Platform 1
Southbound towards Morden

External links

Gallery

Preceding station   Underground no-text.svg London Underground   Following station
Northern line
towards Morden
Proposed
Preceding station   Crossrail   Following station
towards Wimbledon
Chelsea-Hackney line
Crossrail 2
towards Epping

References


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