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station entrance in 2008 |
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| Location | Wood Lane |
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| Local authority | Hammersmith and Fulham |
| Managed by | London Underground |
| Platforms in use | 4 (3 tracks) |
| Fare zone | 2 |
| LUL 2005 usage | 5.769 million[1] |
| LUL 2006 usage | 6.723 million[1] |
| LUL 2007 usage | 7.435 million[1] |
| LUL 2008 usage | 9.33 million[1] |
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| 1947 | Opened |
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| List of stations | Underground · National Rail |
White City tube station is a London Underground station situated in Wood Lane in West London. The station is on the Central Line, between Shepherds Bush and East Acton stations, in Travelcard Zone 2.
Contents |
History
The station was opened on 23 November 1947, replacing the earlier Wood Lane station. Its construction started after 1938 and had been scheduled for completion by 1940, but World War II delayed its opening for another seven years. The architectural design of the station won an award at the Festival of Britain and a commemorative plaque recording this is attached to the building to the left of the main entrance.
The station today
White City is the innermost surface station on the western leg of the Central line, and trains enter tube tunnels immediately to the south of the station. An interesting feature is that the line adopts right-hand running through the station rather than the conventional left-hand running. This is an historical consequence of the reversal of the tracks in the tunnels of the anti-clockwise loop track built for the now-disused Wood Lane station, situated a short distance to the south of White City which was opened in 1908 as the then western terminus of the Central London Railway. The two tracks return to their normal left-hand orientation by a surface fly-over roughly half way between White City and East Acton stations.
The station's running layout has three tracks, with the centre track having platforms on each side meaning that it can handle trains running in either direction. A siding between the running lines to the north of the station allows trains from Central London to be reversed and run back eastwards. Trains going out of service can return to the below ground White City depot to the south of the station via sidings between the running lines.
The nearby Wood Lane station on the Hammersmith & City line provides a convenient interchange between the lines.
This station is also directly opposite the BBC Television Centre and is within walking distance of Loftus Road, home of Queens Park Rangers F.C. It is also within walking distance of Westfield London.
The station received a certificate of merit in the 2009 National Railway Heritage Awards, London Regional catagory, for the modernisation (completed in 2008) that took care to retain heritage and architectural features.[2]
See also
An earlier Wood Lane station on the Hammersmith & City Line was located a short distance to the south and was also known as White City from 23 November 1947 until its closure in 1959.
Gallery
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: White City tube station |
References
- ^ a b c d Transport for London - London Underground performance update
- ^ http://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/media/newscentre/13739.aspx
External links
- London's Transport Museum Photographic Archive White City Station in 1951.
- Shepherd's Bush and White City development
| Preceding station | Following station | |||
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| Central line |
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Coordinates: 51°30′43.5″N 0°13′28.5″W / 51.512083°N 0.224583°W
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