- Dalston Junction railway station
-
Dalston Junction
North entrance on day of re-opening in April 2010
Location of Dalston Junction in Greater LondonLocation Dalston Local authority London Borough of Hackney Managed by London Overground Owner Transport for London Station code DLJ Number of platforms 4 Accessible Fare zone 2 Interchange Dalston Kingsland 5 mins walk away[1] Original company North London Railway Pre-grouping London and North Western Railway Post-grouping LMS 1 November 1865 Opened 30 June 1986 Closed 27 April 2010 Reopened (as temporary ELL terminus) 28 February 2011 Fully reopened with through service to Highbury and Islington List of stations Underground · National Rail External links Departures • Layout Facilities • Buses Coordinates: 51°32′43″N 0°04′29″W / 51.54539°N 0.07474°W
Dalston Junction railway station is in the Dalston area of the London Borough of Hackney at the crossroad of Dalston Lane, Kingsland Road and Balls Pond Road. It is on the London Overground East London Line, in Travelcard Zone 2.
Contents
History
Original station
The station was first opened on 1 November 1865 by the North London Railway on its "City Extension" from the North London Line to Broad Street in the City of London. It had three island platforms with four through lines joining the west side or the North London line, and two joining the east. The station had no overall roof.
The line to Broad Street and the station closed on 27 June 1986.[2] However, the location at the corner of Kingsland High Street and Dalston Lane retained the name Dalston Junction on road and bus signs throughout the period that the station was closed.
Re-opened station
Rebuilding the station for the London Overground network began with site clearance in early 2005. The station was opened by the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, on 27 April 2010. A limited weekday "preview" service started that day with the first train leaving Dalston Junction at 12.05. The service was of eight trains per hour between Dalston Junction and Surrey Quays station from 07:00 to 20:00; four of the eight trains continued to New Cross Gate and four to New Cross.[3]
The full service to West Croydon with branches to New Cross and Crystal Palace began on 23 May 2010, at hours similar to those of the London Underground.[4] The service interval to each of the three southern terminals is approximately fifteen minutes for most of the day, though greater early mornings, late evenings, and parts of Sundays.
In the first phase of the extension of the East London Line, Dalston Junction was the temporary northern terminus for all trains. Since 28 February 2011, trains from West Croydon and Crystal Palace have continued beyond Dalston Junction taking the relaid west curve north of the station to Highbury & Islington. Dalston Junction still remains a terminal for New Cross trains, using the two bay platforms in the middle of the station.[5] Transport for London and Hackney London Borough Council plan to develop the extensive station site with a bus interchange and high-rise towers above the new station.[6]
The new station has two platform islands, the outer sides of each providing through services, the inner bay faces supporting terminating services. Although the route eastward at the north end of the station has been protected it would require substantial reconstruction first. The entire station is covered by a new building.
Track layout
The western of the two chords north of the station was reinstated on 28 February 2011 for East London Line services to Highbury & Islington. There are no plans to rebuild the eastern chord but its alignment has been safeguarded. The eastern chord was used by Broad Street services to Poplar. The City Extension to the south was mainly four-track but now has only two. The wide site at Dalston Junction has in the past had six platforms.
Possible development
Dalston Junction has been proposed as a station on the Chelsea–Hackney Line route between Wimbledon and Epping, should it be built.
Services
All times below are correct as of the December 2010 timetables.
London Overground
East London Line
Mondays to Saturdays there is a service every 5-10 minutes throughout the day, while on Sundays before 13:00 there is a service every 5-9 minutes, changing to every 7-8 minutes until the end of service after that.[7] Current off peak frequency is:[5]
- 8 Northbound to Highbury & Islington
- 4 Terminate here from New Cross
- 4 Southbound to West Croydon
- 4 Southbound to Crystal Palace
- 4 Southbound to New Cross
From 2012, 4 additional trains per hour will go to Clapham Junction via Peckham Rye on the new Clapham Junction Extension, due to open in May that year.
Transport links
London bus routes 30, 38, 56, 67, 76, 149, 242, 243, 277 and night routes N38 and N76 all serve the station.
Out of station interchange is allowed with Dalston Kingsland station distant some four minutes walk. However, with two major roads to cross, it may be more convenient to change directly at Canonbury or Highbury & Islington.Gallery
Concourse
Platforms
Construction Gallery
Lines
Preceding station London Overground Following station towards Highbury & IslingtonEast London Line Terminus From 2012 Terminus South London Line Haggerston
towards Clapham JunctionDisused Railways Mildmay Park North London Railway
Broad Street-RichmondBroad Street Hackney Central North London Railway
Broad Street-PoplarHaggerston Canonbury British Rail
Eastern Region
North London Line (City Branch)Broad Street References
- ^ "Out of Station Interchanges" (Microsoft Excel). Transport for London. May 2010. http://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/35338/response/87510/attach/2/OSIs%20with%20times%20May%2010.xls. Retrieved 3 June 2010.
- ^ "List of dates from 1 January 1985 to 20 January 2006 of last passenger trains at closed BR (or Network Rail stations since privatisation)". Department for Transport Website: Freedom of Information Act responses, February 2006. Department for Transport. 2006. http://www.dft.gov.uk/foi/responses/2006/feb/closuredatesformerbrstations/listofclosuredatestopassenge2682. Retrieved 2008-08-09.[dead link]
- ^ "East London Line officially opened by Boris Johnson". BBC News. 2010-04-27. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/8620188.stm. Retrieved 2010-06-29.
- ^ "East London Line reopening dubbed 'political stunt'". BBC News. 2010-04-14. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/election_2010/england/8621211.stm. Retrieved 2010-06-29.
- ^ a b "Timetable: Highbury & Islington - West Croydon". Transport for London. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloads/highburyislington-timetable.pdf. Retrieved 28 February 2011..
- ^ "East London Line Planning Brief". http://www.hackney.gov.uk/ep-planning-east-london-line-pb.
- ^ http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloads/highburyislington-timetable.pdf
External links
Transport in London Companies and
organisationsBuses · Coaches · Crossrail (under construction) · Cycle Hire · Dial-a-Ride · Docklands Light Railway · London Overground · London Underground · London Rail · River · Source London · Streets · Taxis · TramlinkBus operatorsAbellio · Arriva London · Arriva East Herts & Essex · Arriva Southern Counties · CT Plus · First London · Go-Ahead London · London Sovereign · London United · Metrobus · Metroline · Quality Line · Stagecoach London · UnoTrain operatorsc2c · Chiltern Railways · East Coast · East Midlands Trains · Eurostar · First Capital Connect · First Great Western · First Hull Trains · First ScotRail (Sleeper) · Gatwick Express · Grand Central · Heathrow Connect · Heathrow Express · London Midland · London Overground · National Express East Anglia · South West Trains · Southeastern · Southern · Stansted Express · Virgin TrainsOtherAirports MainOtherMajor stations OtherClapham Junction · East Croydon · Heathrow Stations · Stratford · Wimbledon · Surbiton · All stations by fare zoneRoads MotorwaysRing roadsChargingOlympic Transport Emirates Air Line (cable car) (under construction) · Southeastern Olympic JavelinTicketing Current rail infrastructure projects in the United Kingdom Projects Crossrail · East London line extension · Edinburgh to Glasgow Improvement Programme · Ordsall Chord, Manchester · Thameslink Programme · Waverley Line
Stations Apperley Bridge · Canary Wharf · East Leeds Parkway · Eskbank · Galashiels · Gogar · Gorebridge · Kenilworth · Kirkstall Forge · Newtongrange · Shawfair · Stow · Tweedbank · Woolwich
◄ ProposedProposed Chelsea–Hackney line Safeguarded stations Angel • Buckhurst Hill • Chelsea King's Road • Dalston Junction • Debden • East Putney • Epping • Essex Road • Hackney Central • Homerton • King's Cross St. Pancras • Leytonstone • Loughton • Parsons Green • Piccadilly Circus • Putney Bridge • Sloane Square • Snaresbrook • South Woodford • Southfields • Theydon Bois • Tottenham Court Road • Victoria • Wimbledon Park • Wimbledon • WoodfordProposed stations Categories:- Rail transport stations in London fare zone 2
- Proposed Chelsea-Hackney Line stations
- Transport in Hackney
- Railway stations in Hackney
- Former North London Railway stations
- Railway stations opened in 1865
- Railway stations closed in 1986
- Railway stations opened in 2010
- Railway stations served by London Overground
- British railway junctions
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.