Harman Patil (Editor)

South Ruislip station

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Location
  
South Ruislip

Station code
  
SRU

Fare zone
  
5

Owner
  
London Underground

Managed by
  
London Underground

DfT category
  
F1

2012
  
1.71 million

Number of platforms
  
4

South Ruislip station

Address
  
Ruislip HA4 6TP, United Kingdom

Local authority
  
London Borough of Hillingdon

Similar
  
West Ruislip station, Ruislip Gardens tube station, London Underground, Perivale tube station, Greenford station

South ruislip station 19 2 16 series 23 episode 4


South Ruislip is a station served by London Underground and Chiltern Railways in South Ruislip in west London. The station is owned, managed and staffed by London Underground. The station is in Travelcard Zone 5.

Contents

Trains tones south ruislip station 22nd december 2016


History

The GWR/GCR Joint line to High Wycombe carried services from both Paddington and Marylebone. They met at Northolt Junction, situated slightly to the east of the station, from where four tracks ran westwards to Ruislip Gardens and West Ruislip; there the route shrank to two tracks only. Opened on 1 May 1908 and originally known as Northolt Junction, the station became South Ruislip & Northolt Junction from September 1932 and received its present name on 30 June 1947.

The station was designed by Brian Lewis and F.C.C. Curtis and first served by Central line trains on 21 November 1948 when the Central line extension from London towards West Ruislip was completed after being delayed by World War II. The rounded booking hall was not completed until 1960. The concrete, glass and granite chip frieze in the booking hall is one of the earliest public works by glass artist, Henry Haig.

In late 1973 and early 1974 the track layout was simplified and the manual signal box was removed in early 1990, along with other manual signal boxes on this line, and its function replaced by colour light signalling and power operated points, both controlled from Marylebone. The track alignments were improved to allow higher speed running at the junction for the services from Marylebone, and the pointwork which had allowed trains from Paddington to call at the westbound Chiltern station platform was removed. All eastbound services were moved to the former through road; the eastbound road, which had formerly extended from the platform road at West Ruislip, was closed and lifted, and the eastbound platform widened. The alignment of the turnout towards Marylebone was improved to allow higher-speed running. Fragments of the old trackwork can still be seen to the north of the line at this point. The trackwork at this station has been upgraded and now permits higher speed running up to 100 miles per hour (160 km/h).

The station was transferred from the Western Region of British Rail to the London Midland Region on 24 March 1974.

The station today

The Monday - Friday off-peak service consists of:

  • 1 train per hour to London Marylebone
  • 1 train per hour to High Wycombe
  • Extra trains call during peak times. On weekdays, there is also a single parliamentary train to and from London Paddington via the New North Main Line.

    Ticket barriers control access to all platforms.

    A large West London Waste Authority bulk rubbish handling depot lies to the east of the station which sees a daily waste train in operation. There is also a single line connection with the line to/from Paddington.

    The lines to Marylebone formerly passed either side of West Waste. Part of Evergreen 3 has remodelled Northolt Junction and includes provision to the north of the waste transfer depot of a new down main line alongside the existing up main to allow Chiltern services to be accelerated. The new down main line has a line speed limit of 100 miles per hour (160 km/h) compared with the former 60 miles per hour (97 km/h). The existing down main has been remodelled to become the down loop line, used by trains stopping at South Ruislip station.

    The bridge outside which carries the lines over Station Approach is lower than others locally at 11 feet 9 inches (3.58 m) and is often hit by high vehicles. Either side of it false deck beams have been installed so the danger of any impacts causing damage to the bridge itself has been lessened.

    Connections

    London Buses route 114 and E7 serve the station.

    References

    South Ruislip station Wikipedia


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