Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Penge West railway station

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Location
  
Penge

Station code
  
PNW

Accessible
  
Yes (Northbound only)

Address
  
London, United Kingdom

Number of platforms
  
2

Managed by
  
London Overground

DfT category
  
E

Fare zone
  
4

Owner
  
Network Rail

Local authority
  
London Borough of Bromley

Penge West railway station

OSI
  
Penge East railway station

Similar
  
Anerley railway station, Penge East railway station, Forest Hill railway station, Honor Oak Park railway st, Norwood Junction railway st

Penge West railway station is in the London Borough of Bromley in south London. The station is operated by London Overground, with London Overground and Southern trains serving the station. Thameslink and some Southern services pass through the station. It is located in Travelcard Zone 4.

Contents

Penge East station is a short walk away and has services to London Victoria. Crystal Palace station is also within walking distance and has more frequent trains to London Bridge.

Penge West station forms part of the new southbound route of the London Overground East London Line that opened on 23 May 2010.

Penge West station provides convenient access to The Dinosaur Park via the south gate of the Crystal Palace Park.

History

The original Penge station was opened by the London and Croydon Railway in 1839, probably more for logistical reasons than anything else: the railway crossed the nearby High Street by a level crossing, and the station would have provided a place for trains to wait while the crossing gates were opened for them. The population of Penge was only around 270 at this time, not enough to make the station commercially viable. It was closed in 1841, and the level crossing was converted to a bridge soon afterwards. The entrance to the station was actually on Penge High Street, and not its current position. Evidence of the original entrances can still be seen in the brickwork on either side of the bridge as the track passes over the road.

By the early 1860s, Penge's population had risen to over 5,000 - more than eighteen times its level just twenty years earlier. There was also a demand for improved transport to the Crystal Palace nearby, so the station was reopened by the London Brighton and South Coast Railway on 1 July 1863. This was the same day that the London Chatham and Dover Railway opened its own Penge Lane station on its line to London Victoria. The two stations were renamed Penge West, and Penge East by the Southern Railway on 9 July 1923.

A large building on the down platform served as a ticket office and goods office and included the waiting room and Station Master's office. A wide road from the corner of Oakfield Road and Penge High Street provided access to these buildings and sidings which served a coal yard and timber yard on the site of the old brickfield. The sidings were removed, the buildings demolished and the access road closed when the land was sold for the construction of a Homebase store. Since then access to the down platform has been via a footbridge from the up platform. Previously the only passenger access between the two platforms was via Penge High Street.

The 1863 station building serving the Up platform remained in use until April 2005 when it was damaged in a fire set by arsonists. After a period of limited station facilities, reconstruction work commenced in the Summer of 2006 and was completed in December 2006.

London Overground

As of December 2012 the off peak frequency is:

  • 4tph Northbound to Highbury & Islington
  • 4tph Southbound to West Croydon
  • Southern

    As of May 2010 the off peak frequency is:

  • 2tph Northbound to London Bridge
  • 2tph Southbound to Caterham
  • Note trains from London Bridge to Sutton have been withdrawn. Caterham trains now call here and Anerley.

    The new timetable means that the number of trains serving this station has jumped from 2 per hour to 6, although only 2 of these go to London Bridge.

    Connections

    London Buses routes 176, 197, 227 and 354 serve the station.

    References

    Penge West railway station Wikipedia