Gidea Park railway station explained

Gidea Park
Symbol:crossrail
Manager:Elizabeth line
Owner:Network Rail
Locale:Gidea Park
Borough:London Borough of Havering
Platforms:4
Fare Zone:6
Railcode:GDP
Dft Category:C2
Coordinates:51.582°N 0.2063°W
Years1:1 December 1910
Events1:Opened as Squirrels Heath & Gidea Park
Years2:1913
Events2:Renamed Gidea Park & Squirrels Heath
Years3:20 February 1969[1]
Events3:Renamed Gidea Park
Railexits0405:1.689
Railexits0506: 1.671
Railexits0607: 2.704
Railexits0708: 3.173
Railexits0809: 2.587
Railexits0910: 2.401
Railexits1011: 2.467
Railexits1112: 2.524
Railexits1213: 2.587
Railexits1314: 2.811
Railexits1415: 2.945
Railexits1516: 2.861
Railexits1617: 2.797
Railexits1718: 2.711-->
Railexits1819: 2.834
Railexits1920: 2.872
Railexits2021: 0.753
Railexits2122: 1.684
Railexits2223: 2.805
Access Category:A

Gidea Park railway station is on the Great Eastern Main Line, serving the neighbourhood of Gidea Park in Romford, located in the London Borough of Havering, east London. It is 13chain41chain down the line from London Liverpool Street and is situated between Romford and Harold Wood. Its three-letter station code is GDP and it is in Travelcard zone 6. The station is managed and served by the Elizabeth line.

History

The station, constructed in a cutting, was opened as Squirrels Heath & Gidea Park on 1 December 1910 by the Great Eastern Railway on that company's main line out of London Liverpool Street. The station consisted of two island platforms with access via a footbridge, giving four platform faces despite the line being of two tracks beyond the station environs. The station signal box was elevated on a set of girders spanning the two central tracks, and there was a goods shed and coal staithes at the country end of the station on the south side of the line controlled by an additional signal box.[2] Immediately beyond the goods facilities was the building known as the "Romford Factory" which had been the original locomotive works for the Eastern Counties Railway from 1843 until the opening of Stratford Works in 1847, and remained in use by the railway working on the manufacture and repair of canvas wagon sheets.[3] The line through Romford and Gidea Park as far as Shenfield was quadrupled in 1930 to provide increased capacity and additional carriage sidings were added on the north side of the line opposite the goods facilities as part of these works. The order of words in the station name was switched to Gidea Park & Squirrels Heath in late 1913 and the "Squirrels Heath" suffix was dropped by British Rail in February 1969.[4]

Accidents and incidents

On 2 January 1947, in darkness and dense fog, an express train from London to, hauled by LNER Class B17 4-6-0 No. 1602 Walsingham, passed a signal at danger and collided with a stopping service bound for as it started to depart from Gidea Park on the country-bound main line. The Peterborough train was travelling at an estimated 30 to 35 mph on impact, which destroyed the rear three coaches of the Southend train.[5] Seven people were killed in the crash and 45 were hospitalised. Two of the four lines through the station were reopened within two hours, and the other two followed the next day.[6]

Elizabeth line

In 2017, new trains began entering service as Crossrail partially opened under the TfL Rail brand. The platforms at Gidea Park were extended from their current length of 184m (604feet) to accommodate the new Crossrail trains which are over 200m (700feet) long once extended to nine carriages. New lifts, signage, help points, customer information screens and CCTV were installed and the footbridge and carriage-sidings refurbished. Elizabeth line services began on 24 May 2022 and through services to Paddington commenced on 6 November 2022.

Design

The station has step-free access to all platforms and is accessibility classification category A.[7]

Services

All services at Gidea Park are operated by the Elizabeth line using EMUs.

The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:[8]

During the peak hours, the station is served by a number of additional services to and from London Liverpool Street that start and terminate at Gidea Park. These services do not call at .

On Sundays, the service to and from Shenfield is reduced to 4 tph, with alternating services starting and terminating at Gidea Park.

Connections

London Buses routes 294, 496 and school routes 649, 650 and 674 serve the station.[9] [10]

Further reading

. Gerry Fiennes . I Tried to Run a Railway . 2018 . 1967 . . London . 978-1-78669128-6 . 63–71 . – describes the accident in 1947

Notes and References

  1. Book: Borley, H.V.. Chronology of London Railways.
  2. Book: Brennand, Dave . Ilford to Shenfield . Gidea Park . Midhurst . Middleton Press . Eastern Main Lines . December 2002 . 2002 . 49–53 . 1-901706-974 .
  3. Book: Brennand, Dave . Ilford to Shenfield . Romford Factory . Midhurst . Middleton Press . Eastern Main Lines . December 2002 . 2002 . 54–58 . 1-901706-974 .
  4. Web site: Feature: Havering's lifeline rail service, the Liverpool Street to Shenfield line. Romford Recorder. 25 January 2013. Ramzy. Alwakeel. 31 August 2015. 4 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304124000/http://www.romfordrecorder.co.uk/news/feature_havering_s_lifeline_rail_service_the_liverpool_street_to_shenfield_line_1_1807296. dead.
  5. Web site: Report on the Collision which occurred on the 2nd January, 1947, at GIDEA PARK. Ministry of Transport. 1947. Railways Archive.
  6. Book: Earnshaw, Alan . Trains in Trouble: Vol. 7 . 1991 . Atlantic Books . Penryn . 0-906899-50-8 . 30 .
  7. Web site: Gidea Park Station . National Rail Enquiries . 12 November 2022.
  8. Web site: Elizabeth Line Timetable: December 2023. Transport for London. 8 January 2024.
  9. Web site: Buses from Ardleigh Green (Gidea Park). 1 May 2022. TfL. 20 May 2022.
  10. Web site: Buses from Gidea Park. 1 May 2022. TfL. 20 May 2022.