Charing Cross railway station

From Freepedia

Charing Cross
Image:Ch cross stn fct 020709 036.jpg
Management
Managed by Network Rail
Location
Place Charing Cross
Local authority Westminster
Statistics
Annual entry/exit 4.825 million
Zone 1
Platforms in use 6
History
Key dates Opened 1864

Image:Charing Cross station.jpg Image:Charing Cross in the 19th century.jpg

London Charing Cross station is a central London railway terminus which is unusual in that its train services directly connect to two other railway termini; Waterloo and London Bridge. The station takes its name from the Charing Cross district of London, which itself is named after the twelfth Eleanor cross, which stands in front of the station. The cross marks the point from which all UK road distances from London are measured, so the station can claim to be the most central in London.

The front of the station faces onto The Strand.

The original station building was built on the site of the Hungerford Market by South Eastern Railway and opened 11 January 1864. The station was designed by Sir John Hawkshaw, with a single span wrought iron roof arching over the six platforms on its relatively cramped site. A year later the Charing Cross Hotel, designed by Edward Middleton Barry, opened on 15 May 1865 and gave the station an ornate frontage in the French Renaissance style. At the same time, the replica Eleanor Cross was erected, based on the original 13th Century Whitehall Cross which had been demolished in 1647.

More recently, in 1990, most of the rear of the station was covered by Embankment Place, a post-modern office and shopping complex designed by Terry Farrell and Partners.

Connections

Image:Charing cross Copyright2003KaihsuTai.jpg Services from the station run to Kent, Hastings and south east London. It is situated at the northern end of Hungerford Bridge and is one of seventeen UK stations managed by Network Rail.

It is served by two London Underground stations, one at each end - Embankment and Charing Cross.

References

External links



Preceding station Image:British Rail.gif National Rail Following station
Terminus   Southern   Waterloo East
Terminus   South Eastern   Waterloo East
British railway system - Major UK railway stations

Birmingham New Street | Birmingham Snow Hill | Bristol Temple Meads | Cardiff Central | Derby | Doncaster | Edinburgh Waverley | Exeter St Davids | Glasgow Central | Glasgow Queen Street | Leeds City | Leicester | Liverpool Lime Street | Manchester Piccadilly | Manchester Victoria | Newcastle Central | Nottingham | Reading | Sheffield | York

Stations of London

Blackfriars | Cannon Street | Charing Cross | City Thameslink | Clapham Junction | Euston | Fenchurch Street | King's Cross | King's Cross Thameslink | Liverpool Street | London Bridge | Marylebone | Moorgate | Paddington | St Pancras | Victoria | Waterloo

 

UK railway stations:

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z



Views
Personal tools
In other languages
Similar Links