Chadwell Heath railway station explained

Chadwell Heath
Symbol:crossrail
Manager:Elizabeth line
Owner:Network Rail
Fare Zone:5
Locale:Chadwell Heath
Borough:London Borough of Redbridge
Years1:11 January 1864
Events1:Opened
Platforms:4
Access:yes
Railcode:CTH
Dft Category:C2
Railexits0405:1.608
Railexits0506: 1.557
Railexits0607: 2.209
Railexits0708: 2.353
Railexits0809: 2.247
Railexits0910: 1.978
Railexits1011: 2.145
Railexits1112: 2.229
Railexits1213: 2.346
Railexits1314: 2.687
Railexits1415: 3.007
Railexits1516: 3.674
Railexits1617: 3.884
Railexits1718: 3.755-->
Railexits1819: 3.973
Railexits1920: 4.055
Railexits2021: 1.510
Railexits2122: 2.746
Railexits2223: 4.500
Coordinates:51.5678°N 0.1292°W

Chadwell Heath railway station is on the Great Eastern Main Line in Chadwell Heath, which straddles the London Borough of Redbridge and the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham in East London. It is 9chain79chain down the line from London Liverpool Street and is situated between and . Its three-letter station code is CTH and it is in Travelcard Zone 5.[1]

The station was opened in 1864 by the Great Eastern Railway (GER) on the line between London and Romford built by the Eastern Counties Railway in 1839 (extended in 1840 to Brentwood and thereafter to Colchester and Norwich), the GER having taken over the line in 1862. The station is currently managed and served by the Elizabeth line.

History

Great Eastern Railway (1864–1922)

Chadwell Heath Station was opened on 11 January 1864 and is built on the site of Wangey House, one of Dagenham's oldest buildings dating back to 1250. Wangey House was partly demolished when the Eastern Counties Railway built the line in the 1830s; the last surviving portion was demolished when the Great Eastern Railway widened the line in 1901.

Chadwell Heath had just two platforms linked by a footbridge when it opened in 1864, a Great Eastern Railway mid-Victorian single storey ticket office attached to a two-storey station master’s house at platform level fronting a station approach leading down from what was then called Chitty’s Lane (now Station Road) which crossed the tracks on an overbridge. A simple open waiting shelter with projecting canopy sheltered the London-bound platform. All of this was swept away in 1900 when the line was quadrupled between Ilford and Romford in 1899-1902 and a new station with four platforms was opened in 1901. The ticket office was relocated over the tracks and was the same design as Seven Kings and Goodmayes - a dual-pitched roof structure of red brick with stone dressings, a semi-circular pediment above the entrance which was sheltered by a generous twin-arched canopy; miniature arched pediments topping the end gables.

A signal box existed between the two sets of running lines and this controlled access to the east end of Goodmayes Goods Yard which stretched from Chadwell Heath to Goodmayes station. More information on the yard can be found on the Goodmayes railway station page.At the other end of the station Chadwell Heath had a small goods yard that predominantly dealt with domestic coal traffic and this had a small signal box controlling access.[2]

In 1923, the GER amalgamated with other railways to form the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER).

London & North Eastern Railway (1923–1947)

Chadwell Heath was the focus for the housing estate temporary railway built for the construction of the Becontree estate in the period 1926–33.

The housing estate was not well served by public transport and by the mid 1930s 24 trains were operating towards London between 05:30 and 09:48 in the morning.[3]

During this period local stopping trains were generally hauled by LNER Class N7 locomotives on trains of corridor type carriage stock.

Plans were drawn up in the 1930s to electrify the suburban lines from Liverpool Street to Shenfield at 1,500VDC and work was started on implementing this. However, the outbreak of the Second World War brought the project to a temporary halt and it was not until 1949 that the scheme was completed.[4]

The station suffered a direct bomb hit in April 1941 which wrecked Platform 1 and the footbridge and damaged the ticket office. The damage was repaired but the damaged semi-circular pediments to the ticket office façade and the end gables were all removed and a simple box-style canopy replaced the elaborate late Victorian original.

British Railways (1948–1994)

On January 1, 1948, following nationalisation of the railways, Chadwell Heath became part of the British Railways Eastern Region.[5]

The electrification scheme saw the two signal boxes closed as signalling was upgraded. First to close was Chadwell Heath Goods Yard box on 26 August 1949 followed by Chadwell Heath on 10 July 1949. The area was covered by a new box.[6]

From February 1949 the Class 306 EMUs operated the service to steam timings but an accelerated all electric schedule was introduced in September 1949.[7]

During the 1960s the goods yard and Goodmayes freight yard were both closed.

The signal box (dating from 1949) closed in June 1972 with responsibility for signalling the area passing to Goodmayes.[8]

In 1980 the first Class 315 EMUs were introduced to replace the Class 306s.The 315s were in service until 2022 and were used on passenger trains serving Chadwell Heath. Around this time many of the 1901 platform buildings were demolished.[9]

The stopping services usually call at platforms 3 and 4 whilst platforms 1 and 2 are used by longer distance services to/from Colchester, Clacton, Ipswich and Norwich. When platforms 3 and 4 are closed to rail traffic then the service will use the other platforms.

The railway was sectorised in 1982 and Chadwell Heath and the trains calling at it became part of the London and South-East sector. On 10 June 1986 this was rebranded to become Network South East which was responsible for working services up to privatisation.[10] [11]

Privatisation Era (1994 - present day)

In April 1994 Railtrack became responsible for the maintenance of the infrastructure. Railtrack was succeeded by Network Rail in 2002.

Between privatisation on 1 April 1994 and 4 January 1997 the station was operated by a non-privatised business unit.Passenger services calling at the station have been operated by the following franchises:

In June 2017, new trains began entering service in preparation for the opening of the Crossrail. As of March 2023, the four platforms at Chadwell Heath station have been extended from their previous length of 184m (604feet) to accommodate the Crossrail trains which are over 200m (700feet) long as they have been extended to nine carriages. New lifts, signage, help points, customer information screens and CCTV has been installed. Additionally, a new passing loop for freight traffic was constructed to the west of the station, to replace the disused loop further up the line at .

Initially Elizabeth Line services from Chadwell Heath operated into only and on 22 November 2022 services were able to operate through central London and onto .[12]

Services

All services at Chadwell Heath are operated by the Elizabeth line using EMUs.

The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:[13]

During the peak hours, the station is served by a number of additional services between London Liverpool Street and . These services do not call at .

On Sundays, the service to and from Shenfield is reduced to 4 tph, with alternating services running only as far as Gidea Park.

Connections

London Buses routes 62 and 368 serve the station by the nearby Chadwell Heath Station bus stop.[14]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Buses from Romford. Transport for London.
  2. Wells . Gordon . Chadwell Heath . Great Eastern Journal . October 2006 . 128 . 40, 41.
  3. Wells . Gordon . Chadwell Heath . Great Eastern Journal . October 2006 . 128 . 39.
  4. Wilmoth . VJ . British Railways Electrification . Civil Engineering and Public Works . 51 . 600 . 660–661 . 1956 .
  5. Wells . Gordon . Chadwell Heath . Great Eastern Journal . October 2006 . 128 . 40.
  6. Hoser . Dave . Aspects of GER signalling part 8 . Great Eastern Journal . April 1981 . 26 . 24.
  7. Wells . Gordon . Chadwell Heath . Great Eastern Journal . October 2006 . 128 . 40.
  8. Wells . Gordon . Chadwell Heath . Great Eastern Journal . October 2006 . 128 . 43.
  9. Wells . Gordon . Chadwell Heath . Great Eastern Journal . October 2006 . 128 . 43.
  10. Network SouthEast. Jane's Railway Year. 6. 4–11.
  11. How the Network SouthEast was won . . 747 . 30 April 2014 . 72.
  12. Web site: TFL PRESS OFFICE . Direct Elizabeth Line services into central London commence today . https://web.archive.org/web/20221107105309/https://www.crossrail.co.uk/news/articles/direct-elizabeth-line-services-into-central-london-from-reading-heathrow-and-shenfield-start-today . dead . 7 November 2022 . CROSSRAIL . 31 December 2023.
  13. Web site: Elizabeth Line Timetable: December 2023. Transport for London. 8 January 2024.
  14. Web site: Buses from Chadwell Heath. 1 May 2022. TfL. 20 May 2022.