Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Brent Cross tube station

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Location
  
Brent Cross

Fare zone
  
3

2013
  
2.14 million

Address
  
London, United Kingdom

Local authority
  
London Borough of Barnet

Managed by
  
London Underground

2012
  
2.13 million

2014
  
2.40 million

Number of platforms
  
2

Architect
  
Stanley Heaps

Brent Cross tube station

Original company
  
Underground Electric Railways Company of London

Similar
  
London Underground, Golders Green tube station, Hendon Central tube station, Belsize Park tube station, Burnt Oak tube station

Brent cross tube station


Brent Cross is a London Underground station located on Highfield Avenue in the Golders Green area of north west London. The station is a Grade II listed building.

Contents

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.

History

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.

Development

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 (q.v.) for a rapid transit scheme through the Brent Cross site, terminating at the tube station.

References

Brent Cross tube station Wikipedia