Wood Lane tube station explained

See also: Stations around Shepherd's Bush.

Wood Lane
Manager:London Underground
Original:Transport for London
Years1:13 June 1864
Events1:Line opened
Years2:12 October 2008
Events2:Station opened
Years3:13 December 2009
Events3:Circle line services started
Platforms:2
Tubeexits08:3.82
Tubeexits09: 3.10 -->
Railcode:WOL[1]
Access:yes
Symbol:underground
Fare Zone:2
Coordinates:51.5098°N -0.2242°W

Wood Lane is a London Underground station in the White City area of west London, United Kingdom. It is on the Circle and Hammersmith & City lines, between Latimer Road and Shepherd's Bush Market stations, in Travelcard Zone 2.

Although it is on a line which has been in operation since 1864, the station is new, having opened on 12 October 2008 – the first station to be built on an existing Tube line for over 70 years.[2] It is near the site of a station of the same name that closed on 24 October 1959.

History

The Hammersmith and City line was opened on 13 June 1864 by the Metropolitan Railway (MR) as the Hammersmith branch line. The railway became part of London Underground in 1933 and took on a separate identity as the Hammersmith and City line in 1990.

In 1908 the Franco-British Exhibition and the 1908 Summer Olympics came to London, the first of a number of major events in White City that attracted infrastructural investment by railway companies. Among others, the MR opened its Wood Lane station on the Hammersmith branch to serve the event. From 1927 it was used to transport the public to and from the greyhound racing at White City Stadium.[3] The station opened and closed intermittently, and was renamed twice, to Wood Lane (White City) in 1920 and White City in 1947, before it closed on 24 October 1959 following fire damage. For the next 49 years, the Wood Lane area was served only by White City on the Central line; Hammersmith line trains passed through the area without stopping, the nearest station on that line approximately 1km (01miles) away at Shepherd's Bush.

In the early 1970s, rebuilding a station on the site was considered as part of the plans for the new White City Channel Tunnel terminal located adjacent, however the plans were abandoned in January 1975.[4]

In 2005, work commenced on the large-scale Westfield Shopping Centre. As part of the work, £200m of transport improvements were made including rebuilding Shepherd's Bush Central line station, a new Shepherd's Bush railway station and two bus interchanges. It was decided to build a new station on the Hammersmith & City line, just north-east of the old Metropolitan station on Wood Lane. In 2006 Transport for London decided, after deliberating over various possibilities, on the name Wood Lane, reviving an historical name. This was the first time that a new station on the Tube had been given the name of a former station that had been closed for several years.[5]

The station opened on 12 October 2008. On 13 December 2009 Wood Lane was added to the Circle line when the line was extended to Hammersmith.[6]

Design and construction

Wood Lane Underground Station was designed by Ian Ritchie Architects and it is clad in shot-peened stainless steel, gold anodised aluminium and granite with a 25-metre-high glass screen façade.[7]

Construction was carried out by Costain. The station building occupies an irregularly-shaped site between Wood Lane and the railway viaduct, and presented particular challenges as it lies across the Central line. The lines remained operational during construction, which mostly took place at night.

The structure encases the railway viaduct and platforms are accessed via stairs and lifts either side of the brick arches. During construction the bridge of the Hammersmith & City line over Wood Lane had to be widened to accommodate a new track on the Central line, providing access to the new depot below the Westfield site. A bridge pier was removed and a new steel bridge structure slid into place over a new pier.[8] As with all new Underground stations since the 1990s, the station is fully accessible.

Location

The station is on Wood Lane, which runs north from Shepherd's Bush in the White City area. It serves the Westfield shopping centre and Television Centre (formerly occupied by the BBC) and Loftus Road stadium, the home of Queen's Park Rangers FC, is a short distance away.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Station Codes. Transport for London. 25 April 2021.
  2. Web site: New Wood Lane Underground station opens. October 2008. Transport for London. en-GB. 2020-05-29. 5 February 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210205081905/https://tfl.gov.uk/info-for/media/press-releases/2008/october/new-wood-lane-underground-station-opens. live.
  3. News: Sports in Brief . London Times. 25 May 1927. Gale Group.
  4. Web site: by . Unbuilt London: The Eurostar terminus at White City . 2022-06-15 . www.ianvisits.co.uk . en-GB.
  5. Web site: Wood Lane and Shepherds Bush Market to join Tube map. 20 November 2006. Transport for London. en-GB. 2020-05-29. 3 January 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170103003836/https://tfl.gov.uk/info-for/media/press-releases/2006/november/wood-lane-and-shepherds-bush-market-to-join-tube-map. live.
  6. News: Circle Line extended to the west. 5 March 2009. BBC News. 16 February 2010. 10 March 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090310035950/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7926242.stm. live.
  7. Web site: Wood Lane Station. Ian Ritchie Architects. 16 February 2010. 27 February 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20100227040613/http://www.ianritchiearchitects.co.uk/hcl_station/index.html. live.
  8. Web site: White City Development – 1900 to 2010. November 2006. London Underground Railway Society. 16 February 2010. 16 August 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090816123558/http://lurs.org.uk/documents/pdf%2006/nov/white%20city.pdf. live.