Heathrow Terminal 4 tube station explained

Symbol:underground
Heathrow Terminal 4
Manager:London Underground
Owner:Heathrow Airport Holdings
Locale:Heathrow Terminal 4
Borough:London Borough of Hillingdon
Platforms:1
Fare Zone:6
Original:London Regional Transport
Coordinates:51.459°N -0.446°W
Label Position:right
Years1:12 April 1986
Years2:7 January 2005
Years3:17 September 2006
Years4:9 May 2020
Years5:14 June 2022
Events1:Opened
Events2:Temporary closure
Events3:Reopened
Events4:Temporary closure
Events5:Reopened
Tubeexits04:0.831
Tubeexits06:1.945
Tubeexits07: 2.110
Tubeexits08: 1.170
Tubeexits09: 1.76-->
Access:yes

Heathrow Terminal 4 is a London Underground station at Heathrow Airport on the Heathrow branch of the Piccadilly line. The station is situated in Travelcard Zone 6.

History

In 1979, approval for a fourth terminal at Heathrow Airport was granted. An extension of the Piccadilly line to serve the new terminal was agreed in October 1981. The station box would be built by the British Airports Authority as part of the £200 million construction cost of the new terminal. By 1982, construction of the fourth terminal building was behind schedule, and in July 1982 the location of the station was moved from below the terminal building to a nearby car park.

Construction began in February 1983.[1] London Regional Transport funded the construction of 2.5miles of new tunnels, the track and the fit-out of the station, at a cost of £23 million. Construction was completed by the November 1985. The station was officially opened by the Prince and Princess of Wales on 1 April 1986, before opening the Terminal 4 itself shortly afterwards.[2] Trains, however, did not stop at the station until 12 April, when the new terminal started to handle flights.[3]

The station is situated on a unidirectional loop tunnel which was constructed between the existing Hatton Cross and Heathrow Terminals 2 & 3 stations. The station is one of four on the London Underground with only one platform, and is the only one with one-way train service. It is adjacent to Heathrow Terminal 4 railway station used by Elizabeth line services that travel through the newer mainline tunnel.

In-service routing took trains from Hatton Cross to Terminal 4 then Terminals 2 & 3 and back to Hatton Cross. On 7 January 2005, both the loop track and the station were closed temporarily in order to allow the construction of a new rail junction to link to the new Heathrow Terminal 5 station. All trains reverted to using the original westbound track from Hatton Cross direct to Heathrow Terminals 2 & 3 which was used prior to the opening of Heathrow Terminal 4. For passengers travelling to or from Heathrow Terminal 4, a shuttle bus was provided from Hatton Cross tube station. This situation continued until 17 September 2006 when the loop line and station were reopened after construction finished, with new security and customer announcement technologies in place at the station.[4]

Current routing

Heathrow Terminal 4 tube station is located on a unidirectional clockwise loop that branches off after Hatton Cross westbound, and rejoins the Heathrow branch eastbound to the west of Heathrow Terminals 2 & 3.

Since the opening of Heathrow Terminal 5 station, alternate Heathrow branch trains run via the Terminal 4 loop, with the other alternate trains run directly to Heathrow Terminals 2 & 3, and Heathrow Terminal 5.

Until 2012, free transfer was not possible between terminals, in contrast to the Heathrow Express. In January 2012, free travel was introduced for Oyster card holders between the three Heathrow stations. But to travel from Heathrow Terminals 2 & 3 or Terminal 5 to Terminal 4 one must change trains at Hatton Cross. This journey is free with Hatton Cross itself being part of the free travel zone.

On 9 May 2020, Heathrow Terminal 4 station closed temporarily until 14 June 2022, due to the closure of the airport's Terminal 4 during the COVID-19 pandemic in London.[5]

On 14 June 2022, this station reopened for passenger service.

Connections

Two London Buses routes serve the station: 482 and 490.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Cobley . Jim . 28 March 1986 . Royals "Fly the Tube" as Heathrow plugs in . LRT News . 4–5.
  2. News: 18 April 1986 . Prince opens new Tube link to Airport . LRT News . 4–5.
  3. Book: Green, Oliver. The London Underground: An Illustrated History. Ian Allan. 1987. 63.
  4. Web site: Tube one step closer for Heathrow Terminal 5. 14 September 2006. Transport for London. en. 2020-03-10.
  5. Web site: 4 May 2020. Mark. Caswell. Heathrow closes Terminal 4 to passengers. 2020-09-16. Business Traveller. en-GB.