The station entrance in Thurlow Street,
whose co-ordinates are used for this Waymark, still has its original facade that
lists the Metropolitan and District Railways. The station also has an
underground pedestrian walkway that leads to the various museums located to the
north such as the Natural History Museum.
quote
South Kensington is a London Underground station in Kensington, west London. It
is served by the District, Circle and Piccadilly lines. On the District and
Circle lines, the station is between Gloucester Road and Sloane Square, and on
the Piccadilly Line, it is between Gloucester Road and Knightsbridge. It is in
Travelcard Zone 1. The main station entrance is located at the junction of Old
Brompton Road (A3218), Thurloe Place, Harrington Road, Onslow Place and Pelham
Street. Subsidiary entrances are located in Exhibition Road giving access by
pedestrian tunnel to the Natural History, Science and Victoria and Albert
Museums. Also close by are the Royal Albert Hall, Imperial College London, the
Royal College of Music, the London branch of the Goethe-Institut and the Ismaili
Centre.
The station is in two parts: sub-surface platforms opened in 1868 by the
Metropolitan Railway and the Metropolitan District Railway as part of the
companies' extension of the Inner Circle route eastwards from Gloucester Road to
Westminster and deep level platforms opened in 1906 by the Great Northern,
Piccadilly and Brompton Railway. A variety of underground and mainline services
have operated over the sub-surface tracks, which have been modified several
times to suit operational demands with the current arrangement being achieved in
the 1960s. The deep-level platforms have remained largely unaltered, although
the installation of escalators in the 1970s to replace lifts improved
interchanges between the two parts of the station. Parts of the sub-surface
station and the Exhibition Road pedestrian tunnel are Grade II listed.
Sub-surface station:
The station was opened on 24 December 1868 by the Metropolitan Railway (MR,
later the Metropolitan line) and the Metropolitan District Railway (MDR, later
the District line). The MR had previously opened an extension from Praed Street
(now Paddington) to Gloucester Road on 1 October 1868 and opened tracks to South
Kensington to connect to the MDR when the MDR opened the first section of its
line to Westminster. The original South Kensington station, designed by the MR's
engineer John Fowler, had two platforms although it was intended that this would
be supplemented as MDR services extended.
On 1 August 1870, the MDR opened additional tracks between Gloucester Road and
South Kensington. On 10 July 1871, the MDR opened its own facilities at South
Kensington. The enlarged station had two through platforms for each company and
a bay platform for terminating MR trains from the west. The junction between the
two companies' tracks was also moved from the west side of the station to the
east side.
On 1 February 1872, the MDR opened a northbound branch from its station at
Earl's Court to connect to the West London Extension Joint Railway (WLEJR, now
the West London Line) at Addison Road (now Kensington (Olympia)). From that date
the Outer Circle service began running over the MDR's tracks. The service was
run by the North London Railway (NLR) from its terminus at Broad Street (now
demolished) in the City of London via the North London Line to Willesden
Junction, then the West London Line to Addison Road and the MDR to Mansion House
– at that time the eastern terminus of the MDR.
From 1 August 1872, the Middle Circle service also began operations through
South Kensington, running from Moorgate along the MR's tracks on the north side
of the Inner Circle to Paddington, then over the Hammersmith & City Railway
(H&CR) track to Latimer Road, then, via a now demolished link, on the WLEJR to
Addison Road and the MDR to Mansion House. The service was operated jointly by
the H&CR and the MDR.
On 4 May 1885, the MDR opened a pedestrian subway running from the station
beneath the length of Exhibition Road, giving sheltered access to the newly
built museums for a toll of 1 penny. Although it had cost £42,614 to construct
(approximately £3.41 million today), it was closed on 10 November 1886 and
afterwards was opened only occasionally for special museum events. In 1890, the
South Kensington and Paddington Subway (SK&PS), a proposed cut-and-cover railway
planned to run from South Kensington to Paddington station, offered to purchase
the under-used pedestrian subway for use as the first section of its tunnel. At
18 feet (5.5 m) wide and 11 feet (3.4 m) high the subway could have accommodated
two tracks without difficulty, but the SK&PS's controversial plan to excavate a
trench across Hyde Park was opposed and the railway withdrew its private bill
from Parliament in March 1891. The MDR continued to open the subway
intermittently and charged a toll until 1908, when it was opened permanently for
free. On 30 June 1900, the Middle Circle service was withdrawn between Earl's
Court and Mansion House, and, on 31 December 1908, the Outer Circle service was
also shortened to terminate at Earl's Court. In 1907, the current arcaded
station entrance was opened to a design by George Sherrin.
In 1949, the Metropolitan line-operated Inner Circle route was given its own
identity on the tube map as the Circle line. In June 1957, the reversing bay
track was taken out of use and the track bed was later filled to connect the two
island platforms. The eastbound MR platform (Number 1) and westbound MDR
platform (Number 4) were taken out of use in January 1966 and March 1969
respectively. The tracks for these platforms were also removed and platform 4
was subsequently demolished in the early 1970s to allow escalators to be
provided to the Piccadilly line. The widened island platform is now served by
the District and Circle Lines in both directions. Following the closure of
platforms 1 and 4, platform 3 was renumbered as 1. The current arrangement has
trains running in opposite directions to the original layout. During service
disruption or engineering works, trains can also run Eastbound from Platform 1.
The arcaded station entrance and shops, the brick retaining walls to the
sub-surface platforms and the Exhibition Road pedestrian tunnel are Grade II
listed structures.
Deep-level station:
A two-storey red-glazed building with a single rectangular window on the lower
floor and three large semi-circular windows on the upper floor flanked by two
small circular windows. A white band between the floor levels displays "South
Kensington station".
By the beginning of the 20th century, the MDR had been extended to Richmond,
Ealing Broadway, Hounslow West and Wimbledon in the west and to New Cross Gate
in the east. The southern section of the Inner Circle was suffering considerable
congestion between South Kensington and Mansion House, between which stations
the MDR was running an average of 20 trains per hour with more in the peak
periods.
To relieve the congestion, the MDR planned an express deep-level tube line
starting from a connection to its sub-surface tracks west of Gloucester Road and
running to Mansion House. The tunnels were planned to run about 60 to 70 feet
(18–21 m) beneath the existing sub-surface route with only one intermediate stop
at Charing Cross (now Embankment). Parliamentary approval was obtained in 1897
but no work was done. In 1898, the MDR took over the Brompton and Piccadilly
Circus Railway (B&PCR) which had a route planned from South Kensington to
Piccadilly Circus. The route was modified to join the MDR deep-level route at
South Kensington.
Following the purchase of the MDR by the Underground Electric Railways Company
of London in 1902, the planned MDR and B&PCR lines were merged with a third
proposed route from the Great Northern and Strand Railway. The MDR deep-level
route was revised at its western end to continue to Earl's Court and surface to
the east of Barons Court.
The deep-level platforms were opened on 15 December 1906 by the Great Northern,
Piccadilly and Brompton Railway (GNP&BR, now the Piccadilly line) which ran
between Finsbury Park and Hammersmith. The platforms are placed eastbound above
westbound and were originally served by lifts from street level stopping at both
platform levels. Eastbound GNP&BR trains and MDR trains would have shared the
same platform with the two routes separating at a junction immediately to the
east of the station. Westbound trains would have had separate platforms at the
lower level with the routes merging at a junction west of the station. Although
construction of the section of the MDR tube route east of South Kensington had
been postponed, a partial, 120-foot (37 m) long, section of the westbound MDR
platform was built along with the two for GNP&BR use. Though closed-off from the
rest of the station, it was linked to the lift lobby and was tiled to match the
other platforms. Enlarged tunnel sections for the junctions were constructed
with the original running tunnels and remain visible from passing trains. A new
surface building on Pelham Street for the lifts was designed by Leslie Green
with the GNP&BR's distinctive ox-blood red glazed terracotta façade.
The unused westbound tunnel was used during World War I to store art from the
Victoria & Albert Museum and china from Buckingham Palace and, from 1927 to
1939, was used as a signalling school. During World War II it contained
equipment to detect bombs falling in the River Thames which might require the
emergency floodgates on the under-river tunnels to be closed.
In the early 1970s the lifts to the Piccadilly line platforms were replaced by
escalators, with one pair being provided between the ticket hall and a new
intermediate level, where it met a linking passageway to the Circle and District
line platforms, and three being provided from there to a lower concourse between
the levels of the two Piccadilly line platforms. Stairs up and down from the
lower concourse connect to the platforms. The stairs and passage to the
westbound platform are located in the disused MDR westbound platform tunnel.
With the introduction of escalators, the GNP&BR station building was taken out
of use.
Future proposals:
Many stations on the Circle line which were originally constructed in opening
cuttings have been subject to air-rights developments where cuttings have been
roofed over with buildings built above. South Kensington station and the
adjacent shop premises occupy a site of approximately 0.77 hectares (1.9 acres)
and proposals for redevelopment of the station and the site have been made a
number of times since 1989 without success. In July 2009, architects John
McAslan and Partners examined development options for Transport for London and
proposed a mixed-use scheme retaining the station's existing entrances, arcade
and adjacent shops with a new residential block above the ticket office and
residential development along the Pelham Street and at the Thurloe Square end of
the station. The ticket hall would be enlarged and the open air platforms would
be retained.
unquote
Text source
Wikipedia.