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London Waterloo station

 
Wikipedia: London Waterloo station
 
London Waterloo
Waterloo
The Victory Arch - the main entrance to Waterloo station
Location South Bank
Local authority London Borough of Lambeth
Managed by Network Rail
Station code WAT
Platforms in use 20
Travelcard zone 1
NR 2004/5 usage 62.389 million[1]
NR 2005/6 usage 61.036 million[1]
NR 2006/7 usage 83.993 million[1]
NR 2007/8 usage 100.307 million[1]
NR 2006/7 interchanges 4.227 million[1]

13 July 1848 Opened

List of stations Underground · National Rail
External links DeparturesFacilities

Coordinates: 51°30′11″N 0°06′48″W / 51.5031°N 0.1132°W / 51.5031; -0.1132

London Waterloo station (often called just "Waterloo") is a major railway terminus in London, England owned and operated by Network Rail. It is near the South Bank in the London Borough of Lambeth, and in Travelcard Zone 1. In the financial year from 2007/8 (during which Eurostar services stopped using it) the Waterloo complex including the Underground and Waterloo East handled some 187.236 million passengers (not counting interchanges on the underground), comparable to the Gare du Nord in Paris but more than any other station in Europe.[2] It has the more platforms and a greater floor area than any other railway station in the UK. (Clapham Junction, three stations down the line, has the highest number of trains). It is the terminus of a network of railway lines in South West England and the suburbs of London.

Contents

History

The London and South Western Railway (L&SWR) opened the station on 11 July 1848 as 'Waterloo Bridge Station' (from the nearby crossing over the Thames) when its main line was extended from Nine Elms. Designed by William Tite, it was raised above marshy ground on a series of arches.[3] The unfulfilled intention was for a through station with services to the City. In 1886 it officially became 'Waterloo Station', reflecting the long-standing common usage, even in some L&SWR timetables.

As the station grew it became increasingly ramshackle: a little-used railway line crossed the main concourse on the level and passed through an archway in the station building to connect to the South Eastern Railway's smaller station, now Waterloo East, whose tracks lie perpendicular to those of Waterloo. Passengers were confused by the layout and by the two adjacent stations called 'Waterloo'. This complexity and confusion became the butt of jokes by writers and music hall comics. In Jerome K. Jerome's book Three Men in a Boat no one at Waterloo knows the wanted train's platform, departure time or destination.

Extensive reconstruction between 1900 and 1922 gave 21 platforms and a concourse nearly 800 feet (250 m) long. The main pedestrian entrance, the Victory Arch (known as Exit 5) is a memorial to company staff who were killed during the two world wars. Damage to the station in World War II required considerable repair but entailed no significant changes to the layout.

A past curiosity of Waterloo was that a spur led to the adjoining dedicated station of the London Necropolis Company from which funeral trains, at one time daily, ran to Brookwood Cemetery bearing coffins at 2/6 each. This station was destroyed during World War II.[4]

 v  d  e Railways around the South Bank
Charing Cross
KBHFa
River Thames
WBRÜCKE
exSTRrg eABZlg
Waterloo International
exCPICla + HUB84
xCPICra + HUB25
STR + HUB64
Waterloo
exSTRlf eABZlg
BHF + HUB83
Waterloo East
South Western Main Line
CONTf STR tCONTg
Thameslink
STR tBHF
City Thameslink
STR TUNNELe
STR CPICl exCPICra
Blackfriars
River Thames
STR WBRÜCKE exWBRÜCKE
STR ABZ_ld xABZ_rd
STRrg KRZu STRrf STR
Elephant & Castle
BHF ABZrg STRq STRrf
Thameslink
CONTf STR
and Sevenoaks
STR KBHFa
Cannon Street
STR WBRÜCKE
River Thames
ABZrg STRrf
London Bridge
CPICla CPICr
STRlf ABZlg
Brighton Main Line,
STR
Chatham Main Line
and South Eastern Main Line
CONTf

Ownership of Waterloo underwent a succession, broadly typical of many British stations. Under the 1923 Grouping it passed to the Southern Railway (SR), then in the 1948 nationalisation to British Railways and following the privatisation of British Rail ownership and management passed to Railtrack in April 1994 and finally in 2002 to Network Rail.

Platforms 20 and 21 were lost to the Waterloo International railway station site, which from 1994 until 13 November 2007 was the London terminus of Eurostar international trains. Construction necessitated the removal of decorative masonry forming two arches from that side of the station, bearing the legend "Southern Railway". This was re-erected at the private Fawley Hill Museum of Sir William McAlpine, whose company built Waterloo International. Waterloo International closed when the Eurostar service transferred to the new St Pancras railway station with the opening of the second phase of "HS1", High Speed route 1, also known as the Channel Tunnel Rail Link or CTRL. Platform 20 is being returned to use by domestic services but the substantial track and signalling work required at the station throat to bring the other international platforms into domestic use is currently considered incommensurate with the benefit.

One hundred and seventy automatic barriers on all main line platforms came into operation in January 2009.[citation needed] This is the longest line of ticket barriers in the UK.

Station facilities

The major transport interchange at Waterloo comprises London Waterloo, Waterloo East, the Underground station (which includes the Waterloo and City line to Bank, affectionately known as 'the drain') and an amorphous bus station.

Waterloo station connects to Waterloo East, across Waterloo Road, by a high-level walkway constructed mostly above the bridge of the former little-used connecting curve.

Waterloo station clock

River services operate from nearby Waterloo Pier next to the London Eye.

A large four-faced clock hangs in the middle of the main concourse. Meeting "under the clock at Waterloo" is a traditional rendezvous.[5]

Police station

For many years until February 2009 there was a British Transport Police police station at Waterloo by the Victory Arch, with a custody suite of three cells. Although until the late 1990s it was relatively cramped, over 40 police officers operated from it. [6] Following the closure of the Eurostar Terminal at Waterloo,[7] the police station at Waterloo finally closed in February 2009,[8] and the railway station is now policed from a new Inner London Police Station a few yards from Waterloo at Holmes Terrace.[9] The Neighbourhood Policing Team for Waterloo consists of an Inspector, Sergeant, two Constables, Special Constables, and 13 PCSOs.[10]

Services

Waterloo has 20 terminal platforms, making it the biggest station in the UK in terms of platform numbers. The station is managed by Network Rail, and all trains are operated by South West Trains.

Preceding station National Rail Following station
Terminus   South West Trains
Waterloo to Woking
Reading and Windsor Lines
Mole Valley Line
Kingston Loop Line
Hounslow Loop Line
Hampton Court Line
New Guildford Line
  Vauxhall
  South West Trains
Waterloo to Basingstoke
Alton Line
  Clapham Junction
or
Surbiton
  South West Trains
South Western Main Line
Portsmouth Direct Line
West of England Main Line
  Clapham Junction
or
Woking
 

Waterloo International

Farewell message from Eurostar to the erstwhile International station, viewed from western side of main concourse, December 2007

Waterloo International was the terminus for Eurostar international trains from 1994 until 2007 when they transferred to new international platforms at St. Pancras. Waterloo International's five platforms were numbered 20 to 24.

Preceding station National Rail Following station
    Disused Railways    
Terminus   Eurostar
  Ashford
International

Waterloo East

Waterloo East is a through station, the last stop on the South Eastern Main Line before the terminus at Charing Cross.

Preceding station National Rail Following station
London Charing
Cross
  Southeastern
South Eastern Main Line
  London Bridge
  Southern
Caterham Line
Tattenham Corner Line
 

Waterloo Underground station

Waterloo is the second-busiest station on the Underground network, after Kings Cross St Pancras, served by the Bakerloo, Jubilee, Northern (Charing Cross branch) and Waterloo & City lines. It is one of only two London Terminals without a close connection to the Circle Line the other being London Bridge

Preceding station   London Underground   Following station
Bakerloo line
Northern line
towards Kennington or Morden
towards Stanmore
Jubilee line
towards Stratford
Terminus Waterloo & City line
Terminus

Cultural references

In the 1990s, after Waterloo station was chosen as the British terminus for the Eurostar train service, Florent Longuepée, a municipal councillor in Paris, wrote to the British Prime Minister requesting that the station be renamed because he said it was upsetting for the French to be reminded of Napoleon's defeat when they arrived in London by Eurostar.[11] There is a name counterpart in Paris: the Gare d'Austerlitz is named after the Battle of Austerlitz, one of Napolean's greatest victories. However, this station is less important than most other stations in the city and Eurostar trains run to the Gare du Nord.

Film

Television

Music

  • Waterloo and Waterloo Underground are the setting for the Kinks' song "Waterloo Sunset", written by Ray Davies and recorded in 1967. Its lyric describes two people (Terry and Julie, sometimes taken to refer to sixties icons Terence Stamp and Julie Christie[12][13] ) meeting at Waterloo Station and crossing the river (via Waterloo Bridge, as Davies has confirmed[citation needed]). The song has been recorded by Cathy Dennis and Def Leppard: other acts, such as David Bowie and Elliott Smith, have covered the song in live performances
  • Adrian Evans wrote the song "London Waterloo", which is dedicated wholly to the station
  • The lyrics in the 1979 song "Rendezvous 6:02" by British progressive band U.K. describe a meeting at Waterloo
  • The lyrics to "Torn On The Platform" by Jack Penate refer to the station ("train leaves at two, platform 3, Waterloo")
  • Carl Barat's band Dirty Pretty Things' debut album is called Waterloo to Anywhere
  • The booklet accompanying The Who's album Quadrophenia includes a photo of the album's protagonist on the steps of Waterloo, depicting a moment from the song 5:15
  • The music video to 'West End Girls' by the Pet Shop Boys was part filmed at Waterloo in the mid 1980s
  • Abba held a press photo shoot at Waterloo on 11 April 1974, the day after their first appearance on Top of the Pops, in celebration of their 'Waterloo' winning the Eurovision Song Contest five days before

Gallery

References

External links

http://www.london-se1.co.uk/news/view/3164


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "London Waterloo station" Read more