Kew Gardens station (London) explained

Kew Gardens
Symbol:underground
Symbol2:overground
Manager:London Underground[1]
Owner:Network Rail
Fare Zone:3
Fare Zone 1:4
Locale:Kew
Borough:London Borough of Richmond upon Thames
Years1:1 January 1869
Years2:1869
Years3:1870
Years4:1 June 1877
Years5:1 January 1894
Years6:31 December 1906
Years7:31 December 1910
Years8:3 June 1916
Events1:Opened (L&SWR)
Events2:Started (NLR)
Events3:Started and Ended (GWR)
Events4:Started (MR and DR)
Events5:Started (GWR)
Events6:Ended (MR)
Events7:Ended (GWR)
Events8:Ended (L&SWR)
Platforms:2
Railcode:KWG
Railexits0405:1.510
Railexits0506:1.355
Railexits0607: 0.643
Railexits0708: 0.567
Railexits0809: 0.504
Railexits0910: 0.612
Railexits1011: 0.727
Railexits1112: 0.899
Railexits1213: 0.992
Railexits1314: 1.141
Railexits1415: 1.176
Railexits1516: 1.179
Railexits1617: 1.302
Railexits1718: 1.316 -->
Railexits1819: 1.345
Railexits1920: 1.281
Railexits2021: 0.412
Railexits2122: 0.972
Railexits2223: 1.223
Tubeexits05:2.957
Tubeexits06:3.065
Tubeexits07: 3.298
Tubeexits08: 3.170
Tubeexits09: 3.22-->
Access:yes
Coordinates:51.4771°N -0.2853°W
Dft Category:D
Embed:no
Designation1:Grade II
Designation1 Offname:Kew Gardens station
Designation1 Number:1031878

Kew Gardens is a Grade II–listed London Underground and London Overground station in Kew, in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames. It first opened in 1869 and is now managed by London Underground. The station, which is in Travelcard Zones 3 and 4, is served by both the District line on the London Underground and the North London line on the London Overground, and is situated midway between and stations.

The station is the nearest to Kew Gardens, about 500yd to the west, and The National Archives, about 600yd to the north east.

Kew Gardens Station Footbridge, also a Grade II-listed structure,[2] is next to the station, on the southern side.

Access

The main entrance to the station is at the junction of Station Parade, Station Avenue and Station Approach, about 100yd from Sandycombe Road (B353). There is also an entrance, which is wheelchair-accessible, on North Road, on the other side of the railway line; the two entrances are connected by a pedestrian subway.

History

The station was opened by the London and South Western Railway (L&SWR) on 1 January 1869,[3] in an area of market gardens and orchards.[4] The station was located on a new L&SWR branch line to Richmond built from the West London Joint Railway starting north of Addison Road station (now). The line ran through Shepherd's Bush and Hammersmith via a now closed curve and Grove Road station (also now closed) in Hammersmith. Via a short connection from the North & South Western Junction Railway (N&SWJR) to Gunnersbury the line was also served by the North London Railway (NLR).

Between 1 June 1870 and 31 October 1870, the Great Western Railway (GWR) briefly ran services from to via Hammersmith & City Railway (now the Hammersmith & City line) tracks to Grove Road then on the L&SWR tracks through Kew Gardens.[5]

On 1 June 1877, the District Railway (DR, now the District line) opened a short extension from its terminus at Hammersmith to connect to the L&SWR tracks east of station.[3] The DR then began running trains over the L&SWR tracks to Richmond. On 1 October 1877, the Metropolitan Railway (MR, now the Metropolitan line) restarted the GWR's former service to Richmond via Grove Road station.[5]

The DR's service between Richmond, Hammersmith and central London was more direct than the NLR's route via, the L&SWR's or the MR's routes via Grove Road station or the L&SWR's other route from Richmond via . From 1 January 1894, the GWR began sharing the MR's Richmond service and served Kew Gardens once again,[5] meaning that passengers from Kew Gardens could travel on the services of five operators.

Following the electrification of the DR's own tracks north of in 1903, the DR funded the electrification of the tracks on the Richmond branch, including those through Kew Gardens. This was completed on 1 August 1905[3] and DR services on the line were then operated with electric trains. However, the L&SWR, NLR, GWR and MR services continued to be steam-hauled.

MR services were withdrawn on 31 December 1906 and GWR services were withdrawn on 31 December 1910,[5] leaving operations at Kew Gardens and Gunnersbury to the DR (by then known as the District Railway), the NLR and L&SWR. By 1916, the L&SWR's route through Hammersmith was being out-competed by the District to such a degree that the L&SWR withdrew its service between Richmond and Addison Road on 3 June 1916, leaving the District as the sole operator over that route.[6]

A brass plaque at the station commemorates its reopening on 7 October 1989 by Michael Portillo MP, Minister of State for Transport, after it had been refurbished.

Present

The two-storey yellow brick station buildings are unusually fine examples of mid-Victorian railway architecture and are protected as part of the Kew Gardens conservation area. The station is one of the few remaining 19th-century stations on the North London Line and had one of the last illuminated banner signals on the London Underground, possibly because of the footbridge. This signal was replaced by an electronic version in 2011.

Kew Gardens is the only station on the London Underground network that has a pub attached to it.[7] The pub has a door (no longer in use) which leads out onto platform 1. Previously known as The Railway, and subsequently as "The Pig and Parrot" and as "The Flower and Firkin", the pub reopened after renovation in 2013 as The Tap on the Line.[7]

Kew Gardens Station Footbridge

Bridge Name:Kew Gardens Station Footbridge
Locale:Kew, London
Carries:Pedestrians
Crosses:Railway
Open:1912
Mainspan:23 metres
Coordinates:51.4769°N -0.2851°W
Embedded:
Embed:yes
Designation1:Grade II
Designation1 Offname:Footbridge at Kew Gardens station
Designation1 Date:26 September 2002
Designation1 Number:1031879

The footbridge to the south of the station is also noteworthy and is Grade II-listed in its own right.[2] The railway line bisected Kew, but it was not until 1912 that the bridge was provided to allow residents to cross the tracks safely (previously, a level crossing was used, with the added disadvantage of delaying trains). It is a rare surviving example of a reinforced concrete structure built using a pioneering technique devised by the French engineer François Hennebique.[8] The bridge has a narrow deck and very high walls, originally designed to protect its users' clothing from the smoke of steam trains passing underneath. It also has protrusions on either side of the deck to deflect smoke away from the bridge structure.[9] It was restored in 2004[10] with a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, in a project led by The Kew Society.[9] In July 2017, concerns were expressed about the structural safety of the bridge.[11]

Services

Kew Gardens currently has the following London Underground and National Rail London Overground services, which are operated by the London Underground S7 stock and British Rail Class 378:

London Underground

London Overground

Connections

There are no lifts. Platform 2 (going towards central London) is at ground level. Platform 1 (going towards Richmond) is reached by a short set of 10 steps; there is also a wheelchair-accessible ramp. The National Archives is on the Platform 1 side of the station. The shops of Kew village, Sandycombe Road, and the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew are on the Platform 2 side, and visitors to those locations who alight at Platform 1 must cross the tracks via either the tunnel underneath (left of the main exit, 15 steps down, then 22 steps up) or the footbridge (right of the main exit, 30 steps up, then 30 steps down). The simplest alternative for those wishing to avoid the steps is to remain on the train while it travels one stop to Richmond and returns. Given that trains stand for up to 15 minutes at Richmond, it will be more timely to change at Richmond onto the next Kew Gardens departure.

London Buses route 110 serves the station.[12]

In popular culture

Kew Gardens station appeared in the BBC comedy drama Love Soup (Series 2, Episode 1 – Smoke and Shadows, 1 March 2008) as the fictional "Hove West" station.[13]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Safety boost as London Underground to take control of 11 Silverlink stations . Transport for London. 5 December 2006. 29 July 2015.
  2. Web site: Kew Gardens Station Footbridge . . Urban Design . 1 March 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120816124750/https://urbandesign.tfl.gov.uk/Heritage-Library/Underground/KewGardens-Station-Footbridge.aspx . 16 August 2012 .
  3. Web site: District Line, Dates . Clive's Underground Line Guides . 27 March 2011 . 25 July 2011.
  4. The rural character of the area around the station is shown on the .
  5. Web site: Hammersmith & City Line, Dates . Clive's Underground Line Guides . 4 July 2008.
  6. Web site: District Line, History. Clive's Underground Line Guides . 4 July 2008.
  7. News: 7 things you never knew about Kew Gardens . . 21 March 2015 . 14 August 2015 . Kelly, Guy.
  8. Book: Hennebique Ferro-Concrete, Theory and Practice, A Handbook for Engineers and Architects . London. . 4th . 1921 . 381.
  9. News: Kew footbridge project wins £42,700 lottery grant . . 13 September 2003 . 30 November 2015 . Thorpe, Hannah.
  10. https://www.flickr.com/photos/umdrums/1355189621/ Plaque, Kew Gardens station footbridge
  11. News: Railway bridge in south-west London 'at risk of collapse' . Watts . Matt . 14 July 2017 . Evening Standard. London . 28 September 2017.
  12. Web site: Buses from Kew Gardens. 12 December 2020. TfL. 20 November 2021.
  13. Web site: Real stations – used as locations . The London Underground in Films & Television . 5 September 2015 . Cooper, Nick . Cooper, Claire.