Walthamstow Central station explained

Walthamstow Central
Manager:London Overground
Manager1:London Underground
Owner:Network Rail
Owner1:London Underground
Fare Zone:3
Locale:Walthamstow
Symbol:underground
Symbol2:overground
Borough:London Borough of Waltham Forest
Events1:Opened (GER)
Years1:26 April 1870[1]
Events2:Opened (Victoria line)
Years2:1 September 1968
Platforms:4
Railcode:WHC
Dft Category:C2
Railexits0405: 4.633
Railexits0506: 3.294
Railexits0607: 2.357
Railexits0708: 2.205
Railexits0809: 2.220
Railexits0910: 2.089
Railexits1011: 2.543
Railexits1112: 2.738
Railexits1213: 2.778
Railexits1314: 2.868
Railexits1415: 3.197
Railexits1516: 3.432
Railexits1617: 4.021
Railexits1718: 4.358 -->
Railexits1819: 4.719
Railexits1920: 4.396
Railexits2021: 1.260
Railexits2122: 2.900
Railexits2223: 3.410
Tubeexits06:12.989
Tubeexits07: 13.743
Tubeexits08: 14.160
Tubeexits09: 13.437-->
Access:yes
Access Note: (London Overground only) [2]
Coordinates:51.5831°N -0.0197°W

Walthamstow Central is an interchange station located in Walthamstow in the London Borough of Waltham Forest for London Underground, London Overground and London Buses services.

It is the northern terminus of the Victoria Line and a station on the Chingford branch of the Lea Valley lines operated by London Overground. It lies at a distance of 6chain16chain from London Liverpool Street. The two lines have separate platforms at different levels. The Victoria Line platforms are underground with the Overground's at surface level.

The station is in Travelcard Zone 3. It linked to station on the Gospel Oak to Barking line by a broad footpath, Ray Dudley Way. Walthamstow Central is the closest tube station to Walthamstow Market, the longest outdoor market in Europe.

History

The station was opened by the Great Eastern Railway (GER) as Hoe Street in 1870 when a line was opened from to a temporary station called Shern Hall Street which was east of the Hoe Street station.[3] The line to London, that the Chingford branch uses today was opened two years later in 1872 from Hall Farm Junction to Bethnal Green, with the branch also being extended north to Chingford in 1873.

The GER amalgamated with several other railways to create the London and North Eastern Railway at the beginning of 1923.

In 1948 the railways were nationalised and responsibility for operating the station fell to British Railways (Eastern Region).

The line was electrified in the late 1950s with electric services commencing on 12 November 1960. Early services were formed of Class 305 EMUs but initial technical problems with these saw replacements by Class 302 and Class 304 EMUs.[4]

The station became an interchange station and the eastern terminus of the Victoria line with London Underground services starting on 1 September 1968; when the station's present name was adopted. When originally approved in 1955, the terminus of the line was to be at Wood Street, a plan dropped in 1961 before construction of the line. The platforms for the Victoria line (like all stations on the Victoria line) are underground.

On 31 May 2015, the station's Abellio Greater Anglia services were transferred to London Overground Rail Operations.[5] [6]

Description

General description

The underground station, like many stations on the Victoria line, was built to a low budget. White ceiling panels were never fixed to the ceilings above the platforms; instead the steel tunnel segments were painted black and used to support the fixtures and fittings, cutting lighting levels. A concrete stairway sits between two escalators instead of a third; this economy caused a disruptive station closure for several weeks in 2004 when both escalators went out of service.

The main entrance to the above-ground station is on the down side, opposite the bus station, which was revamped in summer 2004.[7] Until August 2015 three staffed ticket windows opened, replaced by improved ticket machines. The entrance to the tube was revamped in early 2006. A smaller entrance is on the up line, facing a car park. Its ticket office is staffed mainly in peak hours.

Major improvements

A subway was built in 2005 under Selborne Road linking a new bus station with a new Victoria line ticket office. The new subway and ticket office was scheduled for spring 2005 but problems with insufficient power capacity to supply two new lifts, planning and contractual errors, delayed the opening until 19 November 2007. The lifts began operation in late 2008 and some building work took longer to finish.

Ticket barriers control access to all platforms.

A footpath link, called Ray Dudley Way, providing a shortcut to nearby, opened in August 2014.[8]

Plans for a new entrance with step-free access to the Victoria line platforms were approved by Waltham Forest council in January 2021 to be part-funded by a redevelopment of the shopping mall.[9]

Services

Trains are operated by London Overground.

The typical off-peak weekday service pattern is:

Connections

London Buses routes 20, 34, 55, 58, 69, 97, 212, 215, 230, 257, 275, 357, W11, W12, W15, W19, SL1, SL2, school route 675 and night routes N26, N38 and N73 serve the station and bus station.[10] [11]

Gallery

Lea Valley lines (London Overground)

References

Citations

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Chronology of London Railways by H.V.Borley
  2. Web site: Train Station Information and Network Map . . 2 January 2010.
  3. Book: Jackson, Alan A . London's Local Railways . 2nd. 1999. Capital Transport Publishing. Harrow Weald. 372.
  4. Baker. John. Great Eastern section Electrification part 6. Great Eastern Journal. July 1993. 75. 29.
  5. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/info-for/media/press-releases/2014/may/tfl-appoints-london-overground-operator-to-run-additional-services TFL appoints London Overground operator to run additional services
  6. http://www.railpro.co.uk/news/?idArticles=2024 TfL count on LOROL for support
  7. Web site: 15 June 2004 . London Buses – Press release – TfL opens a new bus station for Walthamstow . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20041112030248/http://www.tfl.gov.uk/buses/press-releases/2004/june/press-1060.shtml . 12 November 2004 . 2022-08-18 . Transport for London.
  8. News: Ray Dudley Way pedestrian footpath opened on Monday . . 13 August 2014 . 28 August 2014.
  9. Web site: London Underground gets approval for Walthamstow Central tube station upgrade . ianVisits . 29 January 2021.
  10. Web site: Buses from Walthamstow Central. 9 December 2023. TfL. 16 December 2023.
  11. Web site: Night buses from Walthamstow Central. 29 April 2023. TfL. 17 June 2023.