 Brent Cross Underground Station - Highfield Avenue, Golders Green, London, UK
N 51° 34.608 W 000° 12.793
30U E 693095 N 5717650
Brent Cross underground (tube) station is located on Highfield Avenue in the Golders Green area of north west London. The ticket hall is at street level with the platforms being above street level.
Waymark Code: WMJDT4
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 11/05/2013
Views: 1
Wikipedia
tells us about Brent Cross underground station:
The station is on the Edgware
branch of the Northern line, between Hendon Central and Golders Green
stations, and in Travelcard Zone 3. The Brent Cross shopping centre is some
distance away. However, the bus route 210 stops outside the station on
Highfield Avenue and the bus route 232 stops near the exit of station on
Heathfield Gardens.
The station was designed by architect Stanley Heaps and opened as Brent, the
name of the nearby river, on 19 November 1923. It was the first station of
the extension of what was then known as the Hampstead & Highgate Line, which
was built through undeveloped rural areas to Edgware.
The extension had first been planned prior to World War I when the station
had been due to be called Woodstock. It was renamed from Brent to its
current name on the 20 July 1976 opening of the shopping centre.
Two passing loops were built at the station, not long after it opened, to
allow fast trains to overtake slower ones here, but these extra tracks were
removed in the 1930s. The bridges over Highfield Avenue reflect this extra
width, although both north and south of the station the alignment narrows
again.
A planning application, registered in March 2008, for the nearby Brent Cross
area would improve bus services passing the station. A turning circle for
buses outside the tube station is proposed, needing the demolition of nearby
housing.
In early 2008, the London Group of the Campaign for Better Transport
published the North and West London Light Railway Proposal for a rapid
transit scheme through the Brent Cross site, terminating at the tube
station.
The station is Grade II listed with the entry at the
English Heritage website telling us:
Underground railway station, 1923
by Stanley Heaps. Minor later alterations.
Reasons for Designation
Brent Cross Station and attached
terrace of shops is designated at Grade II for the following principal
reasons: * Architectural interest: subtle massing and proportions make for a
refined composition in the neo-Georgian style, redolent of the character and
aspirations of the outer London suburbs between the wars, an exemplar of the
traditionalist strand of London Underground architecture promoted by Stanley
Heaps in the early 1920s. * Quality of materials: including well-crafted red
Dorking brick, artificial stone and tiled roofs * Intactness: surviving
original porticoes, hardwood doors, ticket hall bench, platform canopies,
clock and a parade of shops in the forecourt
History
Brent Cross (originally just Brent) Station opened on 19 November 1923 and
formed part of the extension of what is now the Northern Line. In common
with neighbouring stations on this north-western branch of the line, the
station was built to designs by Stanley Heaps, architect to London
Underground.
The Northern Line originated as the City & South London Railway (C&SLR),
which opened in 1890 running from King William Street in the City to
Stockwell, and the Charing Cross, Euston & Hampstead Railway (CCE&HR), which
opened in 1907 between Golders Green and Charing Cross. An additional branch
of the latter ran from Camden Town to Highgate. In 1924, by which time the
C&SLR operated from Euston to Clapham Common via the City, the two railways
were amalgamated. A new tunnel was built between Euston and Camden Town. The
Hampstead branch was extended to Edgware in 1924, the southern branch to
Morden in 1937 and the Highgate branch to Mill Hill East and High Barnet in
1935-40. A link was tunnelled between Kennington and Charing Cross in 1937
and it was at this time that the various branches became known as the
Northern Line.
In 1907, the Underground Electric Railways Co of London Ltd (UERL) formed by
the railway speculator Charles Tyson Yerkes, opened the CCE&HR terminus at
the still-rural Golders Green. This provoked surprise, but in fact the new
station stimulated development and the area quickly became a suburb. From
then, the arrival of the tube in areas well beyond London's traditional
hinterland villages such as Highgate, Hampstead and Clapham became a
catalyst for the construction of new housing. The new underground railway
network allowed the middle and working classes to commute to the capital and
but inhabit detached houses with gardens in the spacious, semi-rural suburbs
(at least as the advertising posters of the period cast it). The 'Metroland'
suburbs built around stations on the Metropolitan line were made famous by
John Betjeman, but a similar story could also be told of the five districts
where the 'Hampstead tube' extended: Brent Cross, Hendon Central, Burnt Oak,
Colindale and Edgware. All five stations arrived in advance of major house
building. Most dramatic in its transformation of the area was Hendon Central
Station, which opened as a single-storey pavilion, but was designed to be
the central portico of a vast, quadrant block forming part of Hendon Circus;
this grand piece of suburban planning was completed by 1929. All the 1920s
stations on the branch of the line but Colindale, which was destroyed in the
Second World War, survive.
Stanley Arthur Heaps FRIBA (1880-1962) was assistant to Leslie Green, the
architect to the UERL from 1903. He succeeded Green on the latter's death in
1908. Heaps' first stations, such as those extending the Bakerloo line
northwards in 1914-5, were similar to those designed by Green: faced with
ox-blood faience. During the 1920s and 30s, Heaps worked closely with
Charles Holden (1875-1960) on new tube stations. His work on the Edgware
branch of the Northern Line extension most distinctively his own, and was a
particular response to the aspirations of the new suburbs. Heaps described
the design of the new stations as 'sufficiently dignified to command
respect, and sufficiently pleasing to promote affection' but he rejected the
need for 'buildings that blatantly advertis[e] the railway'.
Brent Cross Station has undergone some changes in recent years, most notably
the introduction of the Underground Ticketing System in the 1980s which
involved the erection of barriers and automatic ticket machines. The ticket
hall has also been re-tiled.
Details
EXTERIOR: Neo-Georgian style, built of narrow red Dorking bricks with a
pyramidal tiled roof. Characteristically for its designer, the entrance to
the station has a Portland stone Doric colonnade with paired columns. This
is surmounted by iron railings in a neo-classical design which support an
original 'UndergrounD' roundel, the colonnade's parapet dipping neatly to
incorporate its circular shape. The entrance doors are paired on either side
of a two central shop units, although only one pair is now used. The
original timber and glass doors and surrounds, the former with marginal
lights, paterae, and bronze fittings survive as do the timber shop fronts.
There is an additional small rear entrance, located at the north-east corner
of the ticket hall leading to Heathfield Gardens, which has a portico of
square Portland stone columns and original doors in the same design as those
to the main entrance.
A terrace of shops, divided by paired stone Doric columns, lines the
south-west side of the station forecourt, incorporating the railway arches.
These were built within a few years of the station. Two of the original four
timber shop fronts survive and all the entrances to the shops retain stone
door-cases with flanking Doric pilasters.
INTERIOR: of the ticket hall is a large cubic space, lit by an attic
clerestory with near-square timber sash windows. The ticket hall has
ceramic-faced black pilasters to the walls, a chunky dentil cornice below
clerestory level, and a black-and-white chequerboard floor. The ceiling has
a coved cornice. The wall tiles, white with green and black edging (the
house style for this part of the Northern Line), are modern replicas of the
originals. The ticket counter, machines, barriers and lighting are all
modern but a wooden bench with tapering legs and the ticket hall clock are
original.
PLATFORM: Access to the single central platform is through a subway passage,
set below the tracks at the south-west of the ticket hall. This has a
wrought-iron unglazed fanlight in a neo-classical design. Stairs at the
passage end branch into two, leading to the island platform above which is
covered by a shallow-gabled lattice girder canopy with timber and glass
covering and timber scalloped valances decorated with shallow discs. An
original station clock, manufactured by the Self-Winding Clock Company of
New York, hangs above the north-western staircase approach. The wall-mounted
metal and timber roundel sign announcing the name of the station is a modern
replica.
Is there other puplic transportation in the area?: Yes
 What level is the station?: Above street level

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