Camden Road railway station explained

Camden Road railway station should not be confused with Camden Road railway station (Midland Railway).

Camden Road
Symbol:overground
Manager:London Overground
Owner:Network Rail
Fare Zone:2
Locale:Camden Town
Borough:London Borough of Camden
Platforms:2
Railexits0405:0.578
Railexits0506: 0.689
Railexits0607: 2.006
Railexits0708: 1.356
Railexits0809: 1.415
Railexits0910: 1.194
Railexits1011: 1.833
Raillowint1011: 6,074
Railexits1112: 3.085
Raillowint1112: 24,126
Railexits1213: 3.810
Raillowint1213: 2,977
Railexits1314: 4.736
Raillowint1314: 13,433
Railexits1415: 4.953
Raillowint1415: 14,861
Railexits1516: 5.121
Raillowint1516: 9,301
Railexits1617: 5.258
Raillowint1617: 52,156
Railexits1718: 5.016
Raillowint1718: 52,351 -->
Railexits1819: 4.968
Raillowint1819: 12,116
Railexits1920: 4.561
Raillowint1920: 13,965
Railexits2021: 1.482
Raillowint2021: 5,983
Railexits2122: 3.071
Raillowint2122: 9,073
Railexits2223: 3.725
Raillowint2223: 11,725
Railcode:CMD
Years1:7 December 1850
Events1:first station opened
Years2:5 December 1870
Events2:resited
Years3:25 September 1950
Events3:Renamed (Camden Road)
Coordinates:51.5418°N -0.1388°W
Access:yes
Dft Category:D

Camden Road railway station in the London Borough of Camden, north London, is operated by London Overground. It is on the North London line and in Travelcard Zone 2.

History

The first Camden Road station was opened by the North London Railway in 1850 on the east side of what is now St. Pancras Way. It was renamed Camden Town on 1 July 1870, but closed on 5 December the same year when it was replaced by the current station, a short distance to the west.[1]

Designed by Edwin Henry Horne, it opened as Camden Town by the North London Railway on 5 December 1870, but was renamed Camden Road on 25 September 1950 to avoid confusion with the London Underground Northern line which had opened in 1907. Thus, between 1907 and 1950, there were two stations called Camden Town. It remains Horne's only station still operating as such.[2]

Between 14 May 1979 and 11 May 1985 Camden Road was the western terminus of the Crosstown Linkline diesel multiple unit service to North Woolwich.

To allow four-car trains to run on the London Overground network, the North London line between and closed in February 2010, and reopened on 1 June that year, in order to install a new signalling system and to extend 30 platforms. After the reopening the work continued until May 2011 with a reduced service and none on Sundays.[3]

Location

The station is at the corner of Royal College Street and Camden Road. The present Camden Town London Underground station is 450 metres to the southwest of this station.[4] [5] It is one of the few railway stations in England in which there is a police station.

Services

The typical weekday service in trains per hour is:

There is now no normal passenger service on the line from Camden Road to Willesden Junction Low Level via Queens Park, though the route can be (and is) used if the line via Hampstead Heath is blocked for any reason.

In addition to the frequent local passenger service, the station is a busy location for freight traffic due to its proximity to the junctions linking the North London line to both the West Coast Main Line at Camden Junction (via the now closed station at) and the East Coast Main Line at Copenhagen Junction. The former is particularly well used by container trains from the deep water ports at Felixstowe and Tilbury to various terminals in the Midlands and North West of England; it also carried a passenger service (between and Broad Street/Liverpool Street) until 1992.

Connections

London Buses routes 29, 46, 253 and 274 and night routes N29, N253 and N279 serve the station.

There is also an official out of station interchange with Northern Line services at the nearby Camden Town underground station.

Camden Highline

See main article: article and Camden Highline. In the future there may be a walking connection to and from King's Cross. The Camden Highline is a proposed public park and garden walk transforming a disused section of the North London Line between the two stations.[7]

Potential reinstatement of platform 3

In a London Rail Freight Strategy released by Network Rail in May 2021, proposed reinstatement of platform 3 as a through platform, with platform 2 becoming a turn back for a potential peak hour service from Camden Road to with potential to continue these during the off peak. [8]

Notes and References

  1. The Forgotten Stations of Greater London by J.Connor and B.Halford-page 25
  2. Book: Williams, Michael. On The Slow Train: Twelve Great British railway journeys. Preface Publishing. 2010. 978-1-8480-9207-5. London. 111.
  3. News: London Overground to close from Gospel Oak to Stratford as part of £326m upgrade to deliver longer, more frequent trains. 15 February 2010 . TfL. 29 May 2011.
  4. https://www.google.com/maps?q=51.5418,-0.1388+to+51.5394,-0.1427&saddr=51.5418,-0.1388&daddr=51.5394,-0.1427&hl=en&sll=51.540417,-0.141985&sspn=0.002856,0.005922&geocode=FSh3EgMd0OH9_w;FchtEgMdlNL9_w&dirflg=w&doflg=ptk&t=m&z=17 Walking directions to Camden Town tube station from Camden Road railway station
  5. However, the accompanying 2008 photograph shows the original name ("Camden Town Station") still displayed on the parapet of the station building of what is now Camden Road station.
  6. Web site: Richmond and Clapham Junction to Stratford route . 15 May 2022 . 19 July 2022 . 20 May 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220520092919/https://content.tfl.gov.uk/lo-timetable-nll-and-wll-may-2022.pdf.pdf . dead .
  7. News: Tim . Richardson . The Garden Bridge is dead, long live the Camden Highline . The Telegraph . 14 August 2017 .
  8. https://www.networkrail.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/London-Rail-Freight-Strategy-Summary-Report.pdf London Rail Freight Strategy Summary Report