Southwark tube station explained

Symbol:underground
Southwark
Manager:London Underground
Locale:Bankside
Borough:London Borough of Southwark
Platforms:2
Fare Zone:1
Coordinates:51.5039°N -0.105°W
Map Type:Central London
Original:London Regional Transport
Years1:20 November 1999
Events1:Opened
Tubeexits03:5.803
Tubeexits04:6.311
Tubeexits05:6.45
Tubeexits06:7.508
Tubeexits07: 8.521
Tubeexits08: 9.660
Tubeexits09: 10.03-->
Access:yes
Interchange1:Blackfriars at Bankside entrance

Southwark is a London Underground station in the London Borough of Southwark at the corner of Blackfriars Road and The Cut. It is between and stations on the Jubilee line, and is in Travelcard Zone 1. It was opened on 20 November 1999 as part of the Jubilee Line Extension.[1] The station is somewhat west of historic Southwark, which is served by Borough and London Bridge stations. Its entrance is across the road from the disused Blackfriars Road railway station.

History

The original plan for the Jubilee Line Extension did not include a station between those at Waterloo and London Bridge; Southwark station was added after lobbying by the local council as well as North Southwark and Bermondsey MP Simon Hughes.[2] [3]

The architects MacCormac, Jamieson, Prichard were appointed in January 1991 by the Jubilee Line Extension design team led by Roland Paoletti.[4] Planning approval for the station was given in 1992,[5] with the contract to build the station and adjacent tunnels awarded to a joint venture of Aoki Corporation and Soletanche in November 1993 at a cost of £64 million.[6] [7] Construction began in 1994, with tunnelling beginning in April 1995.[8]

Built on a cramped site, with its platforms underneath the Victorian main line viaduct between Waterloo East and London Bridge stations, the station presented significant technical and architectural difficulties which were resolved by constructing two concourses at different levels. Substantial compensation grouting was required to stabilise the railway viaducts. The station opened with the final phase of the Jubilee Line Extension on 20 November 1999.[9]

Although it is close to Waterloo, not near the Bankside attractions it was intended to serve, and its only National Rail interchange is to main line station; the passenger usage matches those of other minor central stations. It does however get over twice the traffic of nearby Borough station, and around three times that of Lambeth North.

Design

The station was designed by Sir Richard MacCormac of MacCormac, Jamieson, Prichard. Jubilee Line Extension project director Hugh Doherty called the station a "remarkable feat of engineering".

The upper concourse is the centrepiece of the station. It is a space 16m (52feet) high with a glass roof that allows daylight to enter deep into the station.[10] It is faced with a spectacular glass wall, 40m (130feet) long, consisting of 660 specially cut pieces of blue glass, which was designed by the artist Alexander Beleschenko. MacCormac said the design of this and the lower concourse was inspired by a stage set design by 19th-century Prussian architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel for The Magic Flute. The wall is one of the extension's more celebrated architectural features, winning critical approval and a number of awards.

The two platforms have platform screen doors which are meant to prevent passengers or debris from falling onto the tracks. They are connected at each end to the lower concourse which is a simple tunnel between the platforms and is illuminated by glass and steel "beacons" at each end, and is faced with stainless steel panels, deliberately left unpolished.[11] Stairs lead up to a section of high floor in the central area of the tunnel, from where three narrow tube-like escalator shafts lead sideways (south) to the higher concourse.

One end of the higher concourse connects to Waterloo East station, and the other end to the station's modest low-rise entrance building which is intended as a base for a future commercial development.

In 2000, the station was awarded a Royal Institute of British Architects Bronze medal, as well as being named Royal Fine Arts Commission/British Sky Broadcasting Building of the Year.

Connections

London Buses routes 40, 63 and night routes N63 and N89 serve the station.[12] [13]

Nearby sights

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The new JLE Station at Southwark opens. 15 November 1999. London Transport. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20000303033711/http://www.londontransport.co.uk/underground/jle44.htm. 2000-03-03. 2020-05-27.
  2. Web site: 23 November 2009 . The Jubilee Line Extension and Southwark Tube Station 10 years on . 2024-02-19 . London SE1 . en.
  3. Book: Mitchell, Bob . Jubilee Line Extension: From Concept to Completion . Thomas Telford Publishing . 2003 . 0727730282 . London . 161 .
  4. Book: Mitchell, Bob . Jubilee Line Extension: From Concept to Completion . Thomas Telford Publishing . 2003 . 0727730282 . London .
  5. Web site: London Underground Act 1992 (c. iii) (c. 3) . 22 June 2010 . Opsi.gov.uk.
  6. Web site: 1995-09-21 . Contract 103 Waterloo to London Bridge Running Tunnels, Southwark Station . 2024-02-19 . Construction News . en.
  7. Book: Mitchell, Bob . Jubilee Line Extension: From Concept to Completion . Thomas Telford Publishing . 2003 . 0727730282 . London . 210–212.
  8. Web site: 2009-02-04 . Southwark Underground Station (design process) Case Studies CABE . https://web.archive.org/web/20090204042506/http://www.cabe.org.uk/default.aspx?contentitemid=316&aspectid=6 . 4 Feb 2009 . 2024-02-19 . Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment (CABE).
  9. Web site: 20 November 1999 . Jubilee Line finally opens . 2023-03-24 . BBC News.
  10. Web site: UK Jubilee Line Extension (JLE) . 28 October 2016 . omegacentre.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk . Bartlett School of Planning.
  11. Web site: 10 July 2017 . Case Name: Southwark Underground Station . 19 Feb 2024 . . Historic England.
  12. Web site: Buses from Southwark. June 2022. TfL. 20 July 2022.
  13. Web site: Southwark Underground Station. TfL. 20 July 2022.