Hanger Lane tube station explained

Symbol:underground
Hanger Lane
Manager:London Underground
Fare Zone:3
Locale:Hanger Hill
Borough:London Borough of Ealing
Years1:30 June 1947
Events1:Opened
Platforms:2
Tubeexits06:2.573
Tubeexits07: 2.94
Tubeexits08: 2.92
Tubeexits09: 3.151 -->
Coordinates:51.5303°N -0.2931°W
Interchange:Park Royal

Hanger Lane is a London Underground station in Hanger Hill, Ealing, on the border between West and Northwest London. It is located on the West Ruislip branch of the Central line, between Perivale and North Acton stations, and is in Travelcard Zone 3.

It is within walking distance of Park Royal station on the Piccadilly line. The two lines cross a little east of Hanger Lane station.

History

The Great Western Railway (GWR) opened Twyford Abbey Halt just east of the site on 1 May 1904 as part of the GWR and Great Central Railway Joint Railway project (the New North Main Line) towards High Wycombe. It was closed on 1 May 1911, replaced by Brentham station to the west of the present location. That station was closed between 1915 and 1920 due to World War I economies. Brentham and most main-line stations between North Acton and West Ruislip were finally closed in 1947 when the Central line was extended from North Acton on electrified tracks built under the LPTB New Works Programme of 1935; the delay was due to World War II.

The Central line station opened on 30 June 1947 as "Hanger Lane" as it was near that road.

The entrance and roof of the subsurface ticket hall form the centre of the Hanger Lane Gyratory System, a complex roundabout in West London where the A40 Western Avenue crosses the A406 North Circular Road in an underpass. Passengers must use pedestrian subways under the gyratory to access the station, which is itself above ground.

In 2012 the station building exterior was repainted, refurbished and given new London Underground roundels.

In 2018, it was announced that the station would gain step free access by 2022, as part of a £200m investment to increase the number of accessible stations on the Tube.[1]

Development

In 2004 the multinational Diageo company agreed to build platforms to the east for an interchange with Park Royal on the Piccadilly line,[2] [3] as part of its First Central business park,[4] built on the site of the (now demolished) Guinness brewery. As of June 2022, this has not happened.

Connections

London Buses routes 95, 112, 226, 483 and 487 serve the station.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Huge boost for accessibility as further 13 stations to go step-free. London City Hall. 19 January 2018. en. 2018-02-02.
  2. http://www.alwaystouchout.com/project/33 alwaystouchout
  3. http://www.brent.gov.uk/servlet/ep.ext?extId=101150&reference=32956&st=PL London Borough of Brent: Central line agreement
  4. http://www.firstcentral.co.uk/firstcentral_map.pdf First Central business park