- North Acton tube station
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This article is about the London Underground Central line station. For other "Acton" stations, see Acton station (disambiguation).
North Acton
Location of North Acton in Greater LondonLocation North Acton Local authority London Borough of Ealing Managed by London Underground Number of platforms 3 Fare zone 2 and 3 London Underground annual entry and exit 2008 5.100 million[1] 2009 4.716 million[1] 2010 4.810 million[1] 1923 Opened List of stations Underground · National Rail Coordinates: 51°31′25″N 0°15′35″W / 51.5236°N 0.2597°W
North Acton tube station is in North Acton, west London in the London Borough of Ealing. The station is on the Central line of the London Underground, between East Acton and Hanger Lane. It is on the boundary of Travelcard Zone 2 and Zone 3.
Contents
History
The joint New North Main Line (NNML) of the Great Central and Great Western opened in 1903 and its North Acton railway station followed in 1904.
The Great Western Railway (GWR) built the Ealing & Shepherd's Bush Railway, which connected the Central London Railway (CLR) with the GWR's Ealing Broadway station. CLR trains began using the route on 3 August 1920,[2] The stations at North Acton and West Acton were built and owned by the GWR, and both opened on 5 November 1923.[3] As Transport for London explains:[4]
“ On 18 August 1911, the Central London Railway abandoned its policy of no through running with any other railway, and secured powers to build a short extension from Wood Lane to connect with the intended Ealing & Shepherds Bush line of the Great Western Railway, over which it proposed to exercise running powers. ” North of the Central line tracks were two freight lines, removed in the 1960s, running alongside the Central line as far as White City, to the north of those at a slightly higher level were the two tracks of the NNML The footbridge to the NNML platforms is on the extreme left of this 1933 photograph.[5]
The NNML platforms closed when the Central line was extended on new track from North Acton to Greenford station in 1947. Between South Ruislip station and Old Oak Junction, the GWR line was progressively run down, and in many places it is now single-track, including the stretch running past the tube station. By May 2008, only freight trains and a once-daily passenger service provided by Chiltern Railways used this stretch of line.
The Underground station had only two platforms until in the early 1990s, for operational flexibility, an island platform was created by building a third platform north of the other two, where the old freight line track bed had been. The third platform became the eastbound road and the erstwhile eastbound platform (now the middle platform) was resignalled to allow it to be used also for terminating and starting services. This change allows shuttle services to be run to White City from Ealing Broadway and from West Ruislip in the event of problems elsewhere on the Central line, and at certain times of the day some trains coming from central London are scheduled to terminate at North Acton .
Transport links
London bus routes 95, 260, 266, 440 and 487.
Today
Passenger access is down from the booking hall, which is part-way down the southern side of the cutting with two exits up to Victoria Road. This is the last station before the Central line splits into the West Ruislip and Ealing Broadway branches. Approximately half the trains stopping at the station head to each destination. The support centre for Carphone Warehouse, NEC and numerous other companies have offices in the vicinity. There are approximately 600 new flats directly opposite the station which are being populated as of July 2007, and there is a Holiday Inn Express hotel next door to the station with the Ramada Encore hotel another five minutes' walk away. A new Tesco 'Express' store is now open along with a Lebanese restaurant in the opposite block.
Development
There have been vague and uncosted suggestions over the years to move the station to the east to provide an interchange with the North London Line. This would, however, be in an area with no extra passenger generation, and merely to move the station for interchange purposes has never been sufficient reason. The idea was revived in February 2008, when the Greater London Authority stated in a 'Park Royal draft Opportunity Area Planning Framework'[6] that
“ There may be potential for an interchange between the Central line and North London Line at North Acton. This is purely aspirational at this stage, and would require investigation to determine cost, finance and feasibility. ” In 2004, the multinational Diageo company agreed to build Central line platforms at Park Royal station to the west of North Acton,[7][8] as part of its First Central business park,[9] built on the site of the now demolished Guinness brewery. By mid-2009 this had not yet happened. Such a new station might influence whether adjacent stations were ever moved (particularly Hanger Lane station not far to the west). The entrance to a 'North London Line' North Acton station could be just a few metres on the other side of Victoria Road from the current North Acton station eastern entrance. There is a footpath to the west immediately next to the railway, from nearby Chase Road to Park Royal Road.
Gallery
References
- ^ a b c "Customer metrics: entries and exits". London Underground performance update. Transport for London. 2003-2010. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/tfl/corporate/modesoftransport/tube/performance/default.asp?onload=entryexit. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
- ^ Day, John R.; Reed, John (2008) [1963]. The Story of London's Underground (10th ed.). Harrow: Capital Transport. p. 90. ISBN 978 1 85414 316 7.
- ^ Day & Reed 2008, p. 91
- ^ Transport for London : Central line facts
- ^ London Transport Museum Historical photograph of North Acton station in 1933
- ^ Greater London Authority Park Royal draft Opportunity Area Planning Framework
- ^ alwaystouchout Park Royal Central line platforms
- ^ London Borough of Brent: Central line agreement Audit trail for planning agreement not all on-line, but starts here
- ^ First Central business park Map of Park Royal Central line platforms
Preceding station London Underground Following station towards West RuislipCentral line towards Ealing BroadwayService arrangement if Old Oak Common opens Preceding station London Underground Following station towards West RuislipCentral line towards Ealing BroadwayCentral line Stations Bank · Barkingside · Bethnal Green · Bond Street · Buckhurst Hill · Chancery Lane · Chigwell · Debden · Ealing Broadway · East Acton · Epping · Fairlop · Gants Hill · Grange Hill · Greenford · Hainault · Hanger Lane · Holborn · Holland Park · Lancaster Gate · Leyton · Leytonstone · Liverpool Street · Loughton · Marble Arch · Mile End · Newbury Park · North Acton · Northolt · Notting Hill Gate · Oxford Circus · Perivale · Queensway · Redbridge · Roding Valley · Ruislip Gardens · St Paul's · Shepherd's Bush · Snaresbrook · South Ruislip · South Woodford · Stratford · Theydon Bois · Tottenham Court Road · Wanstead · West Acton · West Ruislip · White City · Woodford
Click to enlargeRolling stock History Former stationsFormer companiesAbandoned plansFormer rolling stockProposed stations First Central · UxbridgeCategories:- Rail transport stations in London fare zone 2
- Rail transport stations in London fare zone 3
- Central Line stations
- Tube stations in Ealing
- Former Great Western Railway stations
- Railway stations opened in 1923
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