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Coordinates: 51°31′19″N 0°09′25″W / 51.522°N 0.157°W / 51.522; -0.157
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{{otheruses4|the London Underground station on Baker Street||Baker Street (disambiguation)}}
{{Short description|London Underground station}}
{{Use British English|date=August 2012}}
{{London stations| name = Baker Street| image =[[Image:BakerStreet-Metropolitan1.jpg|300px|The Metropolitan Line platforms at Baker Street tube station]]| manager = [[London Underground]] | zone = [[Travelcard Zone 1|1]] | locale = [[Marylebone]] | borough = [[City of Westminster|Westminster]] | years=1863<br>1868<br>1906<br>1907<br><br>1939<br>1979 |events=Opened (MR)<br>Opened (MR platforms to north)<br>Opened (BS&WR, as terminus)<br>Extended (BS&WR, became through station)<br>Started (Bakerloo Line to Stanmore)<br>Ended (Bakerloo Line to Stanmore)<br>Started (Jubilee Line)| platforms=10| tubeexits=20.725}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2017}}
{{Infobox London station
| name = Baker Street
| symbol = underground
| alt_name =
| image_name = Baker Street station entrance 2020.jpg
| image_alt =
| caption = Station entrance
| locale = [[Marylebone]]
| borough = [[City of Westminster]]
| manager = [[London Underground]]
| owner =
| platforms = 10
| fare_zone = 1
| coordinates = {{coord|51.522|-0.157|type:railwaystation_region:GB|display=inline,title}}
| map_type = Central London
| years1 = {{start date|10 January 1863}}
| years2 = April 1868
| years3 = 10 March 1906
| years4 = 27 March 1907
| years5 = 20 November 1939
| years6 = 1961
| years7 = 1 May 1979
| years8 = 1 May 1979
| years9 = 30 July 1990
| years10 = 30 July 1990
| events1 = Opened (MR)
| events2 = Opened (MR platforms to north)
| events3 = Opened (BS&WR, as terminus)
| events4 = Extended (BSWR – Marylebone)
| events5 = Started (Bakerloo to Stanmore)
| events6 = Ended (Met to Aylesbury)
| events7 = Ended (Bakerloo to Stanmore)
| events8 = Started (Jubilee line)
| events9 = Ended (Met to H'smith/Barking)
| events10 = Started (Hammersmith & City)
| railexits0203 =
<!--| tubeexits03 =21.574
| tubeexits04 = {{decrease}} 20.78
| tubeexits05 = {{decrease}} 20.725
| tubeexits06 = {{increase}} 23.837
| tubeexits07 = {{increase}} 24.01
| tubeexits08 = {{increase}} 24.61
| tubeexits09 = {{increase}} 25.63-->
| listing_grade = II*
| listing_start = {{Start date and age|df=yes|1987|3|26}}
| listing_amended = 28 June 2010
| listing_entry = 1239815
| listing_reference = <ref name="eh_1239815">{{NHLE | num=1239815 | desc=Baker Street Station: Main Entrance Building and Metropolitan, Circle and Hammersmith & City line platforms (no. 1-6) including retaining wall to Approach Road |access-date=6 May 2014 }}</ref>
| interchange = [[Marylebone station|Marylebone]] {{rail-interchange|london|rail}}
| interchange_note = <ref>{{citation London station interchange January 2016}}</ref>
}}


'''Baker Street''' is a [[London Underground]] station at the junction of [[Baker Street]] and the [[Marylebone Road]] in the [[City of Westminster]]. It is one of the original stations of the [[Metropolitan Railway]] (MR), the world's first underground railway, opened on 10 January 1863.{{sfn|Rose|2007}}
'''Baker Street tube station''' is a station on the [[London Underground]] located on [[Baker Street]]. The station lies in [[Travelcard Zone 1]] and is served by five different lines. On the [[Circle Line|Circle]] and [[Hammersmith & City Line|Hammersmith & City]] Lines it is between [[Great Portland Street tube station|Great Portland Street]] and [[Edgware Road tube station|Edgware Road]]. On the [[Metropolitan Line]] it is between Great Portland Street and [[Finchley Road tube station|Finchley Road]]. On the [[Bakerloo Line]] it is between [[Regent's Park tube station|Regent's Park]] and [[Marylebone tube station|Marylebone]] and on the [[Jubilee Line]] it is between [[Bond Street tube station|Bond Street]] and [[St. John's Wood tube station|St. John's Wood]].


The station is in [[Travelcard Zone 1]] and is served by five lines.<ref name=tubemap>{{cite map/Standard Tube Map}}</ref> On the [[Circle line (London Underground)|Circle]] and [[Hammersmith & City line|Hammersmith & City]] lines the station is between [[Edgware Road tube station (Circle, District and Hammersmith & City lines)|Edgware Road]] and [[Great Portland Street tube station|Great Portland Street]] stations, and on the [[Metropolitan line]] it is between [[Finchley Road tube station|Finchley Road]] and Great Portland Street stations. On the [[Bakerloo line]] the station is between [[Marylebone tube station|Marylebone]] and [[Regent's Park tube station|Regent's Park]] stations, and on the [[Jubilee line]] it is between [[St John's Wood tube station|St John's Wood]] and [[Bond Street station|Bond Street]] stations.<ref name=tubemap />
==History==
[[Image:MG 2813.jpg|thumb|left|Main ticket hall]] Baker Street station was opened by the [[Metropolitan and Metropolitan District Railways#Metropolitan Railway|Metropolitan Railway]] (MR) on [[10 January]] [[1863]] as one of the original stations on the world's first underground railway - these platforms are now served by the Circle and Hammersmith & City lines. On [[13 April]] [[1868]] the adjacent open platforms, now serving the Metropolitan line, opened as part of a spur to [[Swiss Cottage (Metropolitan Line) tube station|Swiss Cottage]] station (a closed station different to the current Jubilee Line [[Swiss Cottage tube station|Swiss Cottage]] station) which was to be steadily extended to [[Harrow-on-the-Hill tube station|Harrow-on-the-Hill]] and beyond. Over the next few decades this section of the station saw much rebuilding to provide 4 platforms. The current Metropolitan line layout largely dates from 1925 and the bulk of the surface buildings, designed by the architect Charles Clark, also date from this period.


== Location ==
The Baker Street & Waterloo Railway (BS&WR, now the Bakerloo Line) opened on [[10 March]] [[1906]], with Baker Street as the initial northern terminus of the line before it was extended to Marylebone station on [[27 March]] [[1907]]. On [[20 November]] [[1939]], the Bakerloo Line took over the [[Stanmore tube station|Stanmore]] branch of the [[Metropolitan Line]] (including stopping services between [[Finchley Road tube station|Finchley Road]] and [[Wembley Park tube station|Wembley Park]]) following the construction of two additional platforms and connecting tube tunnels between Baker Street and Finchley Road. The Jubilee Line subsequently replaced the Bakerloo Line on the Stanmore branch from its opening on [[1 May]] [[1979]].
{{stack|{{maplink |frame=yes |frame-width=240 |frame-height=180 |type=point |marker=rail-metro |marker-color=<!--Default--> |zoom=15 |text=Location of Baker Street station }}|[[File:Baker Street tube station, 1862.jpg|thumb|The original Baker Street station entrances on each side of Marylebone Road, 1862]]}}
The station has entrances on [[Baker Street]], [[Chiltern Street]] (ticket holders only) and [[Marylebone Road]]. Nearby attractions include [[Regent's Park]], [[Lord's Cricket Ground]], the [[Sherlock Holmes Museum]] and [[Madame Tussauds]].


== History ==
On 23 August 1973, a bomb was found in a carrier bag in the ticket hall. The bomb was defused by the bomb squad. On the 30th of that month, a member of staff found another bomb left on the overbridge. Again, it was defused without any injury.
=== Metropolitan Railway – the world's first underground railway ===
In the first half of the 19th century, the population and physical extent of London grew greatly.{{refn|In 1801, approximately one million people lived in the area that is now [[Greater London]]. By 1851 this had doubled.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/data_cube_page.jsp?data_theme=T_POP&data_cube=N_TOT_POP&u_id=10097836&c_id=10001043&add=N |title=Total Population |work=A Vision of Britain Through Time |publisher=[[University of Portsmouth]]/[[Jisc]] |year=2009 |access-date= 13 December 2015}}</ref> The increasing resident population and the development of a commuting population arriving by train each day led to a high level of traffic congestion with huge numbers of carts, cabs, and omnibuses filling the roads and up to 200,000 people entering the [[City of London]], the commercial heart, each day on foot.{{sfn|Wolmar|2004|p=22}}|group=note}} The congested streets and the distance to the city from the stations to the north and west prompted many attempts to get parliamentary approval to build new railway lines into the city.{{refn|None were successful, and the 1846 [[Royal Commission on Metropolitan Railway Termini]]<!-- This is Metropolitan Railway in the general sense rather than the specific sense used elsewhere in the article--> banned construction of new lines or stations in the built-up central area.{{sfn|Simpson|2003|p=7}}<ref name="1846 Royal_Commission">{{cite news |date=1 July 1846 |title=Metropolitan Railway Termini |newspaper=[[The Times]] |issue=19277 |page=6 |url-access=subscription |access-date= 13 December 2015 |url=http://infotrac.galegroup.com/itw/infomark/918/267/67235331w16/purl=rc1_TTDA_0_CS100956897&dyn=27!xrn_52_0_CS100956897&hst_1?sw_aep=kccl}}</ref> The concept of an underground railway linking the City with the mainline termini was first proposed in the 1830s.<ref name=1846GCRt>{{cite news |date=12 May 1846|title=Grand Central Railway Terminus |newspaper=[[The Times]] |issue=19234 |page=8 |url=http://find.galegroup.com/ttda/infomark.do?&source=gale&prodId=TTDA&userGroupName=kccl&tabID=T003&docPage=article&searchType=AdvancedSearchForm&docId=CS135035564&type=multipage&contentSet=LTO&version=1.0 |url-access=subscription |access-date= 13 December 2015}}</ref>|group=note}} In 1852, [[Charles Pearson]] planned a railway from Farringdon to King's Cross. Although the plan was supported by the city, the railway companies were not interested and the company struggled to proceed.{{sfn|Day|Reed|2008|p=9}} The Bayswater, Paddington, and Holborn Bridge Railway Company was established to connect the [[Great Western Railway]]'s (GWR) Paddington station to Pearson's route at King's Cross.{{sfn|Day|Reed|2008|p=9}} A [[bill (proposed law)|bill]] was published in November 1852<ref name="BP&HBR">{{London Gazette |issue=21386 |page=3480 |date=30 November 1852 }}</ref> and in January 1853 the directors held their first meeting and appointed [[Sir John Fowler, 1st Baronet|John Fowler]] as its engineer.{{sfn|Green|1987|pp=3–4}} Several bills were submitted for a route between [[London Paddington station|Paddington]] and [[Farringdon station|Farringdon]].{{sfn|"Fowler's Ghost"|1962|p=299}} The company's name was also to be changed again, to [[Metropolitan Railway]]{{sfn|Day|Reed|2008|p=9}}<ref>{{London Gazette |issue=21497 |pages=3403–3405 |date=25 November 1853 }}</ref>{{refn|The original established name was the "North Metropolitan Railway".{{sfn|"Fowler's Ghost"|1962|p=299}}|group=note}} and the route was approved on 7 August 1854.{{sfn|"Fowler's Ghost"|1962|p=299}}<ref>{{London Gazette |issue=21581|pages=2465–2466 |date=11 August 1854 }}</ref>
[[File:Centenary_sign_outside_Baker_Street_tube_station,_central_London.jpg|thumb|Sign on wall beside Marylebone Road beyond station entrance]]
Construction began in March 1860;{{sfn|Day|Reed|2008|p=10}} using the "[[cut-and-cover]]" method to dig the tunnel.{{sfn|Jackson|1986|p=24}}{{sfn|Walford|1878}} Despite several accidents during construction,{{sfn|Wolmar|2004|p=36}} work was complete by the end of 1862 at a cost of £1.3 million.{{sfn|Wolmar|2004|pp=30 & 37}} Rail services through the station opened to the public on Saturday, 10 January 1863.{{sfn|Day|Reed|2008|p=14}}{{#tag:ref|The railway included a ceremonial run from Paddington and a large banquet for 600 shareholders and guests at Farringdon a day earlier.{{sfn|Wolmar|2004|p=39}} These platforms are now served by the Circle and Hammersmith & City lines.{{sfn|Rose|2007}}|group=note}}


In the next few years, extensions of the line were made at both ends with connections from [[Paddington tube station (Circle and Hammersmith & City lines)|Paddington]] to the GWR's Hammersmith and City Railway (H&CR) and at [[Gloucester Road tube station|Gloucester Road]] to the [[District Railway]] (DR). From 1871, the MR and the DR operated a joint ''Inner Circle'' service between Mansion House and Moorgate Street.{{sfn|Rose|2007}}{{#tag:ref|After further extensions by the Metropolitan Railway to [[Liverpool Street station|Liverpool Street]] (1875), [[Aldgate tube station|Aldgate]] (1876) and [[Tower of London tube station|Tower of London]] (1882), the Inner Circle was completed in 1884.{{sfn|Rose|2007}}|group=note}}
==The station today==
[[Image:BakerStTilework fxcr wb.jpg|thumb|left|Unique tilework in this station, commemorates the fictional [[Sherlock Holmes]]' association with Baker Street]]


==== North-western "branch" ====
Of the MR's original stations, the sub-surface Circle and Hammersmith and City Line platforms are the best-preserved. Plaques along the platform show old plans and photographs of the station.
In April 1868, the Metropolitan & St John's Wood Railway (M&SJWR) opened a single-track railway in tunnel to [[Swiss Cottage tube station (1868–1940)|Swiss Cottage]] from new platforms at Baker Street East (which eventually become the present Metropolitan line platforms).{{sfn|Green|1987|p=11}}{{sfn|Edwards|Pigram|1988|p=33}} The line was worked by the MR with a train every 20 minutes. A junction was built with the original route at Baker Street, but there were no through trains after 1869.{{sfn|Horne|2003|pp=7–8}}{{#tag:ref|The original intention of the M&SJWR was to run underground north-east to [[Hampstead Village]], and indeed this appeared on some maps.{{sfn|Demuth|Leboff|1999|p=9}} This was not completed in full and the line was built in a north-western direction instead; a short heading of tunnel was built north of Swiss Cottage station in the direction of Hampstead.{{sfn|Jackson|1986|pp=374}} This is still visible today when travelling on a southbound Metropolitan line service.|group=note}}


The M&SJWR branch was extended in 1879 to [[Willesden Green tube station|Willesden Green]] and, in 1880, to [[Neasden tube station|Neasden]] and [[Harrow-on-the-Hill station|Harrow-on-the-Hill]].{{sfn|Horne|2003|p=13}} Two years later, the single-track tunnel between Baker Street and Swiss Cottage was duplicated and the M&SJWR was absorbed by the MR.{{sfn|Bruce|1983|p=20}}{{#tag:ref|Further extensions took the Metropolitan Railway to [[Pinner tube station|Pinner]] (1885), [[Rickmansworth station|Rickmansworth]] (1887), [[Chesham tube station|Chesham]] (1889), [[Aylesbury railway station|Aylesbury]] (1892), [[Uxbridge tube station|Uxbridge]] (1904) and [[Watford tube station|Watford]] (1925).{{sfn|Rose|2007}}|group=note}}
The station layout is rather complex. The sub-surface station is connected to the open-air Metropolitan Line station. This is a terminus for some Metropolitan Line trains, but there is also a connecting curve that joins to the Circle Line just beyond the platforms that allows Metropolitan line trains to run to Aldgate in the City.


=== Bakerloo and Jubilee lines ===
Below this is a deep-level tube station for the Bakerloo and Jubilee Lines. These are arranged in a [[cross-platform interchange]]. With ten platforms overall, Baker Street has the most platforms of any Underground station on the network.
[[File:Baker Street & Waterloo Railway1893.png|thumb|Route diagram which shows the original route of the Bakerloo line between Baker Street and Waterloo.]]
In November 1891, a [[Local and Personal Acts of Parliament in the United Kingdom|private bill]] was presented to Parliament for the construction of the [[Baker Street and Waterloo Railway]] (BS&WR).<ref name="LG_01">{{London Gazette |issue=26225 |date=20 November 1891 |pages=6145–6147 }}</ref> The railway was planned to run entirely underground from [[Marylebone station|Marylebone]]<ref name="1896_Act">{{London Gazette |issue=26767 |date=11 August 1896 |pages=4572–4573 }}</ref> to [[Elephant & Castle tube station|Elephant & Castle]]{{sfn|Badsey-Ellis|2005|pp=84–85}} via Baker Street and [[Waterloo tube station|Waterloo]]<ref name="LG_01" /> and was approved in 1900.{{sfn|Badsey-Ellis|2005|p=56}}<ref name="1900_act">{{London Gazette |issue=27218 |date=7 August 1900 |pages=4857–4858 }}</ref> Construction commenced in August 1898{{sfn|Wolmar|2004|p=168}} under the direction of Sir [[Benjamin Baker (engineer)|Benjamin Baker]], W. R. Galbraith and R. F. Church<ref name="Lee-March1956">{{cite magazine |last=Lee |first=Charles E. |date=March 1956a |title=Jubilee of the Bakerloo Railway&nbsp;– 1 |magazine=The Railway Magazine |pages=149–156}}</ref> with building work by Perry & Company of Tredegar Works, [[Bow, London|Bow]].<ref name="Lee-March1956" />{{refn|By November 1899, the northbound tunnel reached Trafalgar Square and work on some of the station sites was started, but the collapse of the L&GFC in 1900 led to works gradually coming to a halt. When the UERL was formed in April 1902, 50 per cent of the tunnelling and 25 per cent of the station work was completed.<ref name="progress_02">{{cite news |date=10 April 1902 |title=The Underground Electric Railways Company Of London (Limited) |newspaper= [[The Times]] |issue=36738 |page=12 |url=http://infotrac.galegroup.com/itw/infomark/393/804/42116361w16/purl=rc1_TTDA_0_CS201779850&dyn=13!xrn_31_0_CS201779850&hst_1? |access-date=2 December 2015 |url-access=subscription }}</ref> With funds in place, work restarted and proceeded at a rate of {{convert|73|ft|m|2}} per week,.{{sfn|Day|Reed|2008|p=69}} By February 1904, most of the tunnels and underground parts of the stations between Elephant & Castle and Marylebone were complete and works on the station buildings were in progress.<ref name="progress_04">{{cite news |date=17 February 1904 |issue=37319 |page=14 |access-date=2 December 2015 |url=http://infotrac.galegroup.com/itw/infomark/393/804/42116361w16/purl=rc1_TTDA_0_CS235204177&dyn=21!xrn_4_0_CS235204177&hst_1? |newspaper= [[The Times]] |title=Railway And Other Companies&nbsp;– Baker Street and Waterloo Railway |url-access=subscription}}</ref> The additional stations were incorporated as work continued elsewhere.{{sfn|Wolmar|2004|p=173}}|group=note}} Test trains began running in 1905.{{sfn|Wolmar|2004|p=173}} The official opening of the BS&WR by [[Edwin Cornwall|Sir Edwin Cornwall]] took place on 10 March 1906.{{sfn|Horne|2001|p=17}} The first section of the BS&WR was between Baker Street and [[Lambeth North tube station|Lambeth North]].<ref name=culgbakerloo>{{cite web |last=Feather |first=Clive |access-date=2 December 2015 |work=Clive's Underground Line Guides |title=Bakerloo line |url=http://www.davros.org/rail/culg/bakerloo.html |date=30 December 2014 |archive-date=8 December 2015 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208204450/http://www.davros.org/rail/culg/bakerloo.html}}</ref> Baker Street was the temporary northern terminus of the line until it was extended to Marylebone on 27 March 1907, a year after the rest of the line.{{sfn|Rose|2007}}<ref name=culgbakerloo /> The BS&WR's station building designed by [[Leslie Green]] stood on Baker Street and served the tube platforms with lifts, but these were supplemented with escalators in 1914, linking the Metropolitan line and the Bakerloo line platforms by a new concourse excavated under the Metropolitan line.{{sfn|Horne|2001|p=38}} An elaborately decorated restaurant and tea-room was added above Green's terminal building, the Chiltern Court Restaurant, which was opened in 1913.<ref name="bradley-chiltern">{{cite book |last1=Bradley |first1=Simon |title=The Railways: Nation, Network and People |date=2015 |publisher=Profile Books |isbn=9781847653529 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U36lBwAAQBAJ&q=chiltern%20court%20restaurant%20baker%20street&pg=PT479 |access-date=9 September 2019 |language=en}}</ref>


On 1 July 1933, the MR and BS&WR amalgamated with other Underground railways, tramway companies and bus operators to form the London Passenger Transport Board (LPTB), and the MR became the Metropolitan line, while the BS&WR became the Bakerloo line of [[London Transport (brand)|London Transport]].<ref name="LPTA">{{London Gazette
Outside the [[Marylebone Road]] exits, a large statue of [[Sherlock Holmes]] commemorates the fictional detective's association with Baker Street. This statue was featured prominently as a landmark in the [[United States|American]] television series ''[[The Amazing Race]]'' in 2005.
| date = 9 December 1930
| issue = 33668
|pages=7905–7907
}}</ref> However, there was a bottleneck on the Metropolitan line at Finchley Road where four tracks merge into two to Baker Street. LPTB decided to extend the Bakerloo line from Baker Street as a branch line, taking over the existing section between Finchley Road and Stanmore.{{#tag:ref|In 1929, construction of a spur line from Wembley Park to Stanmore began.{{sfn|Horne|2003|p=42}} It opened on 10 December 1932.{{sfn|Rose|2007}}|group=note}} Construction began in April 1936. On 20 November 1939, following the construction of an additional southbound platform and connecting tube tunnels between Baker Street and [[Finchley Road tube station|Finchley Road]] stations, the Bakerloo line took over the Metropolitan line's stopping services between Finchley Road and [[Wembley Park tube station|Wembley Park]] and its [[Stanmore tube station|Stanmore]] branch.{{sfn|Horne|2003|pp=59–61}}
<ref name=culgmetropolitan>{{cite web |url=https://www.davros.org/rail/culg/metropolitan.html |date=5 October 2018 |title=Metropolitan line |work=Clive's Underground Line Guides |last=Feather |first=Clive |url-status=live |access-date=8 December 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181207164054/https://www.davros.org/rail/culg/metropolitan.html |archive-date=7 December 2018}}</ref> The current Bakerloo ticket hall and escalators to the lower concourse were provided in conjunction with the new service.{{sfn|Horne|2001|p=48}}


After the Victoria line had been completed in the 1960s, the new Jubilee line was proposed which would take a route via Baker Street, Bond Street, Trafalgar Square, Strand, Fleet Street, Ludgate Circus and Cannon Street, then proceeding into southeast London.<ref>{{Cite news |title=More Tube lines discussed: Easing travel load |date=27 April 1965 |work=The Times |location=London |page=7}}</ref> This new line was to have been called the '''Fleet line'''.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Willis |first=Jon |title=Extending the Jubilee Line: The planning story |publisher=London Transport |year=1999 |oclc=637966374}}</ref> The Jubilee line added an extra northbound platform and replaced the Bakerloo line service to Stanmore from the station, opening on 1 May 1979.{{sfn|Rose|2007}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.davros.org/rail/culg/bakerloo.html |title=Bakerloo line |work=Clive's Underground Line Guides |last=Feather |first=Clive |access-date=10 April 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402092749/http://www.davros.org/rail/culg/bakerloo.html |archive-date=2 April 2015}}</ref>
A restoration in the 1980s on the oldest portion of the Baker Street station, brought its appearance back to original 1863 historical accuracy.


=== Circle and Hammersmith & City lines ===
<br clear=left>
The initial route on the Hammersmith & City line was formed by the H&CR, running between Hammersmith and Moorgate. Services were eventually extended to Barking via the DR and shared with the existing MR tracks between Baker Street and Liverpool Street.{{sfn|Rose|2007}} The route between Hammersmith and Barking was shown on the [[tube map]] as part of the [[Metropolitan line]], but since 1990 has been shown separately, the Metropolitan line becoming the route from Aldgate to Baker Street and northwards through "[[Metro-Land]]" to Uxbridge, [[Watford tube station|Watford]] and [[Amersham station|Amersham]].{{sfn|Rose|2007}}<ref name="T90">{{cite web|title=London Underground map 1990|url=http://www.clarksbury.com/cdl/maps/tube90.jpg|work=The London Tube map archive|access-date=21 November 2012}}</ref>


The circle line was initially formed by the combination of the MR and DR routes, which were between Edgware Road and South Kensington, Edgware Road and Aldgate via King's Cross St Pancras, South Kensington and Mansion House,{{sfn|Wolmar|2004|p=72}}{{sfn|Lee|1956b|p=7}} and a joint railway between Mansion House and Aldgate.{{sfn|Jackson|1986|p=110}}{{sfn|Rose|2007}}{{sfn|Day|Reed|2008|p=18}}{{sfn|Horne|2006|pp=5–6}} Since 1949, the Circle line is shown separately on the map.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://homepage.ntlworld.com/clivebillson/tube/tube.html#1949|title=1949 tube map|access-date=5 March 2012}}</ref>
== See also ==
{{commonscat|Baker Street tube station}}
*[[List of London Underground stations|A list of all London Underground stations]]
{{Geolinks-UK-buildingscale|51.5226|-0.1572}}
*Oldest Portion of Baker Street Station
**[http://www.scienceandsociety.co.uk/results.asp?image=10302139 As shown in 1863]
**[http://www.railfaneurope.net/pix/gb/metro/London_Underground/station/Baker_Street/baker-street-a-jp.jpg As shown in 2004] (restoration)[http://www.railfaneurope.net/pix/gb/metro/London_Underground/station/Baker_Street/pix.html]


=== Incidents ===
{{s-start}}
On 18 June 1925, electric locomotive No.4 collided with a passenger train when a signal was changed from green to red just as the locomotive was passing it. Six people were injured.<ref name=Earnshaw5>{{cite book |last=Earnshaw |first=Alan |title=Trains in Trouble: Vol. 5 |year=1989 |publisher=Atlantic Books |location=Penryn |isbn=0-906899-35-4 |page=20 }}</ref>
{{s-rail|title=LUL}}
{{s-line|system=LUL|line=Bakerloo|previous=Marylebone|next=Regent's Park}}
{{s-line|system=LUL|line=Circle|previous=Edgware Road|next=Great Portland Street|type=NW|type2=NW}}
{{s-line|system=LUL|line=Hammersmith & City|previous=Edgware Road|next=Great Portland Street}}
{{s-line|system=LUL|line=Metropolitan|previous=Finchley Road|next=Great Portland Street|type=Four}}
{{s-line|system=LUL|line=Jubilee|previous=St. John's Wood|next=Bond Street}}
{{end}}


On 23 August 1973, a bomb was found in a carrier bag in the ticket hall.<ref name="step_8197">{{cite web |title=History of Baker Street Tube Station |url=http://london.stepbystep.com/history-of-baker-street-tube-station-in-london-8197/ |publisher=Jessica Higgins |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120304175116/http://london.stepbystep.com/history-of-baker-street-tube-station-in-london-8197/ |archive-date=4 March 2012 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref> The bomb was defused by the [[bomb squad]]. A week later, on 30 August, a member of staff found another bomb left on the overbridge. Again, it was defused without any injury.<ref name="cooper">{{cite web |url=http://www.nickcooper.org.uk/subterra/lu/luterror.htm |title=Attacks on the London Underground |last=Nick |first=Cooper |work=The Underground at War |date=5 June 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100423053554/http://www.nickcooper.org.uk/subterra/lu/luterror.htm |archive-date=23 April 2010 |url-status=live }}</ref>
[[Category:Bakerloo Line stations]]

[[Category:Circle Line stations]]
== The station today ==
[[Category:Hammersmith & City Line stations]]
[[File:Baker_Street_Station_entrance_Marylebone_Road_(1).jpg|thumb|Station entrance for Bakerloo and Jubilee lines on Marylebone Road]]
[[Category:Metropolitan Line stations]]
[[File:Baker Street tube station MMB 07.jpg|thumb|right|alt=Baker street tube station|Metropolitan line platforms at the station]]
[[Category:Jubilee Line stations]]
Baker Street station is the combination of three separate stations, with several booking offices throughout its operational years. Major changes took place in 1891-93 and 1910–12. The first part is the Circle Line station, which has its two platforms now used by the Circle and Hammersmith & City lines. They are situated on a roughly east-to-west alignment beneath Marylebone Road, spanning approximately the stretch between Upper Baker Street and Allsop Place. This was part of the original Metropolitan Railway from Bishop's Road (now [[Paddington tube station (Circle and Hammersmith & City lines)|Paddington (Circle and Hammersmith & City lines) station]] to Farringdon Street (now [[Farringdon station|Farringdon]]) which opened on 10 January 1863.<ref name=lurspoibaker>{{Cite web|url=http://www.lurs.org.uk/articles15_htm_files/01%20nov%20BOOKING%20OFFICES%20AT%20BAKER%20STREET.pdf |title=Booking Offices at Baker Street |last=Pask |first=Brian |work=Points of Interest |publisher=London Underground Railway Society |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190206080856/http://www.lurs.org.uk/articles15_htm_files/01%20nov%20BOOKING%20OFFICES%20AT%20BAKER%20STREET.pdf |archive-date=6 February 2019 |url-status=live |access-date=6 February 2019}}</ref>
[[Category:1863 architecture]]

[[Category:Transport in Westminster]]
The platforms serving the main branch of the Metropolitan line towards Harrow, Uxbridge and beyond are located within the triangle formed by Marylebone Road, Upper Baker Street and Allsop Place, following the alignment of Allsop place. This station is the second section which opened on 13 April 1868 by the Metropolitan & St. John's Wood Railway. This was later absorbed by the Metropolitan Railway, which is usually known to them as Baker Street East station.<ref name=lurspoibaker/>
[[Category:London Travelcard zone 1]]

The final section is the deep-level tube station of the Baker Street & Waterloo Railway (now part of the [[Bakerloo line]]), situated at a lower level beneath the site of Baker Street East, opened on 10 March 1906.<ref name=lurspoibaker/> This part of the station now contains four platforms which are used by both the Bakerloo and Jubilee lines.<ref name=jarriercarto>{{cite map |url=http://carto.metro.free.fr/documents/CartoMetroLondon.v3.7.pdf |format=PDF |title=Greater London Transport Tracks Map |work=CartoMetro London Edition |version=3.7 |last=Jarrier |first=Franklin |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181118092031/http://carto.metro.free.fr/documents/CartoMetroLondon.v3.7.pdf |archive-date=18 November 2018}}</ref>

This station is a terminus for some Metropolitan line trains, but there is also a connecting curve that joins to the Circle line just beyond the platforms, allowing Metropolitan line through services to run to [[Aldgate tube station|Aldgate]]. The deep-level Bakerloo and Jubilee lines platforms are arranged in a [[cross-platform interchange]] layout<ref>{{citation step free tube map}}</ref> and there are track connections between the two lines just to the north of the station.<ref name=jarriercarto/> Access to the Bakerloo and Jubilee lines is only via escalators.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.geofftech.co.uk/tube/facts.html |title=Tube Stations that only have escalators |work=Tube Facts and Figures |publisher=Geofftech |access-date=10 April 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150403155732/http://www.geofftech.co.uk/tube/facts.html |archive-date=3 April 2015 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

[[File:BakerStreetOriginalPlatforms1863.jpg|thumb|right|A Hammersmith and City Line train to Barking arrives at Baker Street's oldest platforms opened in 1863]]

With ten platforms overall, Baker Street has the most amount of [[London Underground]] platforms of any station on the network.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/destinations/europe/uk/london/9789966/London-Underground-150-fascinating-Tube-facts.html |title=London Underground: 150 fascinating Tube facts |website=Telegraph |date=9 January 2013 |access-date=10 April 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150410072909/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/destinations/europe/uk/london/9789966/London-Underground-150-fascinating-Tube-facts.html |archive-date=10 April 2015 |url-status=live}}</ref> Since [[Swiss Cottage tube station|Swiss Cottage]] and St John's Wood have replaced the former three stations between Finchley Road and Baker Street on the Metropolitan line, it takes an average of five and a half minutes to travel between them.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.geofftech.co.uk/tube/facts.html |title=Stations that it takes the longest to travel between |work=Tube Facts and Figures |publisher=Geofftech |access-date=10 April 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150403155732/http://www.geofftech.co.uk/tube/facts.html |archive-date=3 April 2015}}</ref> Essentially, the [[Metropolitan Line]] operates as a fast service while the Jubilee Line offers local service between the two stations.

As part of the [[Transported by Design]] programme of activities, on 15 October 2015, after two months of public voting, Baker Street underground station's platforms were elected by Londoners as one of the 10 favourite transport design icons.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ltmuseum.co.uk/press-and-media/news/595-london-s-transport-design-icons-announced |title=London's transport 'Design Icons' announced|publisher=London Transport Museum |access-date=27 March 2016 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160331004853/http://www.ltmuseum.co.uk/press-and-media/news/595-london-s-transport-design-icons-announced |archive-date=31 March 2016 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Goldstein |first=Danielle |url=http://www.timeout.com/london/blog/transported-by-design-vote-for-your-favourite-part-of-london-transport-080415 |title=Transported By Design: Vote for your favourite part of London transport |publisher=Timeout.com |date=4 August 2015 |access-date=14 July 2017}}</ref>

The former Chiltern Court Restaurant above the station is still in use today as the Metropolitan Bar, part of the [[Wetherspoons]] pub chain.<ref name="bradley-chiltern" /> The rest of the block, known as [[Chiltern Court]] and completed by the Metropolitan Railway's in-house architect, [[Charles Walter Clark]] in 1929, houses residential apartments.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.buildington.co.uk/buildings/2058/london-nw1/baker-street/chiltern-court|title=Chiltern Court|publisher=Buildington|access-date=24 April 2022}}</ref>

=== Sub-surface platforms ===
[[File:BakerStTilework fxcr wb.jpg|thumb|right|upright|Unique tile-work in this station commemorates the fictional [[Sherlock Holmes]]'s association with Baker Street]]
Of the MR's original stations, now the Circle and Hammersmith & City line platforms five and six are the best preserved dating from the station's opening in 1863. Plaques of the Metropolitan Railway's coat of arms along the platform and old plans and photographs depict the station which has changed remarkably little in over a hundred and fifty years.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://150greatthingsabouttheunderground.com/2013/01/06/76-the-original-platforms-at-baker-street/|title=76. The original platforms at Baker Street|last=Jones|first=Ian|date=6 January 2013|work=150 Great Things About the Underground|access-date=10 April 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150410085343/http://150greatthingsabouttheunderground.com/2013/01/06/76-the-original-platforms-at-baker-street/|archive-date=10 April 2015|url-status=live}}</ref> Restoration work in the 1980s on the oldest portions of Baker Street station brought it back to something similar to its 1863 appearance.

The Metropolitan line's platforms one to four were largely the result of the station's rebuild in the 1920s to cater for the increase in traffic on its outer suburban routes. Today the basic layout remains the same with platforms two and three being through tracks for City services to Aldgate from Amersham, Chesham and Uxbridge flanked by terminal platforms one and four which are the domain of services to and from Watford. The northern end of the platforms is in a cutting being surrounded by Chiltern Court and Selbie House the latter of which houses Baker Street control centre responsible for signalling the Metropolitan line from Preston Road to Aldgate, as well as the Circle and Hammersmith & City lines between Baker Street and Aldgate. The southern end of the platforms are situated in a cut and cover tunnel which runs towards Great Portland Street. All Metropolitan line platforms can function as terminating tracks however under normal circumstance only dead ended platforms one and four are used as such.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.flickr.com/photos/llangollen_signalman/albums/72157632671559016|title=Baker Street Control Room|website=Flickr|language=en-us|access-date=5 April 2017|date=November 2009}}</ref>

=== Deep-level tube platforms ===
The Bakerloo line uses platforms 8 and 9,{{cn|date=December 2024}} which date from 10 March 1906 when the Baker Street & Waterloo railway opened between here and [[Lambeth North tube station|Lambeth North]] (then called Kennington Road). The contraction of the name to "Bakerloo" rapidly caught on, and the official name was changed to match in July 1906.

By the mid-1930s, the [[Metropolitan line]] was suffering from congestion caused by the limited capacity of its tracks between Baker Street and [[Finchley Road tube station|Finchley Road]] stations. To relieve this pressure, the network-wide ''[[New Works Programme]], 1935–1940'' included the construction of new sections of tunnel between the Bakerloo line's platforms at Baker Street and Finchley Road and the replacement of three Metropolitan line stations ([[Lord's tube station|Lord's]], [[Marlborough Road tube station|Marlborough Road]] and [[Swiss Cottage (Metropolitan line) tube station|Swiss Cottage]]) between those points with two new Bakerloo stations ([[St John's Wood tube station|St John's Wood]] and [[Swiss Cottage tube station|Swiss Cottage]]). The Bakerloo line also took over the Metropolitan line's service to [[Stanmore tube station|Stanmore]] on 20 November 1939. The branch remained part of the Bakerloo line until 1 May 1979, when similar congestion problems for the Bakerloo line caused by the two branches converging at Baker Street led to the opening of the [[Jubilee line]], initially created by connecting the Stanmore branch to new tunnels bored between Baker Street and [[Charing Cross tube station|Charing Cross]]. Following refurbishment in the 1980s the original tiling scheme was replaced with tiles depicting the silhouette of Sherlock Holmes, who lived at [[221B Baker Street]].

The Bakerloo still maintains its connection with the now Jubilee line tracks to Stanmore, with tunnels linking from Northbound Bakerloo line platform 9 to the Northbound Jubilee line toward [[St John's Wood tube station|St John's Wood]] and Southbound from Jubilee line platform seven to the Southbound Bakerloo line towards [[Regent's Park tube station|Regent's Park]].<ref>{{Cite book |title=London Underground Junction Diagrams |publisher= London Underground |year=2015 |url= https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/257157/response/638159/attach/3/Junction%20Diagrams.pdf |page=2}}</ref> Although no passenger services operate over these sections they can be used for the transfer of engineering trains and were used to transfer Bakerloo line [[London Underground 1972 Stock|1972 stock]] trains to and from [[Acton Works]] as part of a refurbishment programme.<ref>{{cite news |url= https://www.railengineer.uk/2016/07/27/london-underground-train-life-extension/ |title=London Underground train life extension |date=27 July 2016 |website=Rail Engineer |access-date=5 April 2017 |archive-date=22 August 2018 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20180822113803/https://www.railengineer.uk/2016/07/27/london-underground-train-life-extension/ |url-status=dead}}</ref>

Jubilee line trains use platforms 7 and 10,{{cn|date=December 2024}} which opened in 1979 when the newly built Jubilee line took over existing Bakerloo line services to Stanmore running through new tunnels from Baker Street to Charing Cross to serve as a relief line to the Bakerloo, which by then was suffering from capacity issues. In 1999 the Jubilee line was extended from Green Park to Stratford, making the Jubilee line platforms at Charing Cross redundant after twenty years. The design of the Jubilee line platforms at Baker Street has changed little since being opened, with illustrations depicting famous scenes from Sherlock Holmes cases.

[[Cross-platform interchange]] is provided between the Bakerloo and Jubilee lines in both directions.

=== Station improvements ===

==== Step-free access project ====
In 2008 [[Transport for London|TfL]] proposed a project to provide step-free access to the sub-surface platforms. The project was a TfL-funded Games-enabling project in its investment programme (and not a project specifically funded as a result of the success of the London 2012 Games bid).<ref name="tfl_invest">{{cite web |url=http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloads/corporate/operational-and-financial-performance-investment-programme-reports-appendix3.pdf |title=TfL's Transport Portfolio Executive Report for the London 2012 Olympic Games and Paralympic Games – Quarter 2 2007/08 |year=2008 |publisher=TfL |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120425172715/http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloads/corporate/operational-and-financial-performance-investment-programme-reports-appendix3.pdf |archive-date=25 April 2012 |url-status=live }}</ref> The project was included in the strategy on accessible transport published by the London 2012 Olympic Delivery Authority and the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games.<ref name="2012_access">{{cite web |url=http://www.london2012.com/documents/oda-transport/accessible-transport-strategy-accessible-pdf.pdf |page=31 |publisher=London 2012 |title=Accessible Transport Strategy for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games |date=May 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081121221109/http://www.london2012.com/documents/oda-transport/accessible-transport-strategy-accessible-pdf.pdf |archive-date=21 November 2008 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref>

Access to the Metropolitan line platforms 1–4 (serving trains to and from Finchley Road) would be provided by a bridge from the Bakerloo and Jubilee line ticket hall, with a lift from the bridge to each island platform. Through a passage from platforms 1–2, this would also give step-free access to platform 5 (Circle and Hammersmith & City line eastbound trains). Access to platform 6 (Circle and Hammersmith & City line westbound trains) would be provided by demolishing the triangular building outside the station, on the north side of Marylebone Road, and taking over the public pedestrian subway under Marylebone Road to provide a link between a lift up from platform 5 to the subway and a lift at the other end of the subway down to platform 6. The replacement for the triangular building would also act as an emergency exit for the station.<ref name="tfl_baker">{{cite web |url=http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloads/baker-street-step-free-access-brochure.pdf |title=Step-free access Baker Street station |publisher=TfL |date=September 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130814215931/http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloads/baker-street-step-free-access-brochure.pdf |archive-date=14 August 2013 |url-status=live}}</ref>

TfL applied for planning permission and listed building consent for providing access to platforms 5 and 6 on 1 October 2008, but the application was subsequently withdrawn. (The part of the proposed scheme to provide step-free access to platforms 1–4 is within TfL's permitted development rights, and so does not require planning permission.)<ref name="west_08647">{{cite web |url=http://idoxpa.westminster.gov.uk/online-applications/applicationDetails.do?activeTab=summary&keyVal=K8DH6TRP0C400 |title=Planning – Application Summary 08/08647/FULL |date=1 October 2008 |publisher=Westminster City Council |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130814170802/http://idoxpa.westminster.gov.uk/online-applications/applicationDetails.do?activeTab=summary&keyVal=K8DH6TRP0C400 |archive-date=14 August 2013 |url-status=live }}</ref> TfL announced on 31 March 2009 that because of budgetary constraints the step-free scheme would be deferred.<ref name="tfl_11436">{{cite press release |url=http://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/media/newscentre/11436.aspx |title=TfL sets out £9.2bn 2009/2010 budget to deliver major improvements this year |publisher=TfL |date=31 March 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120119074233/http://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/media/newscentre/11436.aspx |archive-date=19 January 2012 |url-status=live }}</ref>

==== Platform lengthening ====
In order to accommodate the new, longer [[London Underground S7 and S8 Stock|S stock]] trains, which started operating Metropolitan line services in August 2010, platforms 1 and 4 have been extended.<ref name="MR201012p46ff">{{cite news |title='S' stock making its mark |work=Modern Railways |location=London |page=46 |date=December 2010 }}</ref> However, the Circle and Hammersmith & City line platforms 5 and 6 have not been extended to accommodate their new S7 Stock trains, due to the enclosed nature of the platforms. Instead, [[selective door operation]] is employed.

== Services ==

=== Bakerloo line ===
[[File:2010-10-13-london-by-RalfR-037.jpg|thumb|right|A Bakerloo line train arriving at southbound platform 8.]]
On the Bakerloo line, Baker Street station is between [[Marylebone station|Marylebone]] to the north and [[Regent's Park tube station|Regent's Park]] to the south.<ref name=tubemap /> Trains can terminate at [[Queen's Park (London) station|Queen's Park]], [[Stonebridge Park tube station|Stonebridge Park]], or [[Harrow and Wealdstone tube station|Harrow and Wealdstone]] to the north, and [[Piccadilly Circus tube station|Piccadilly Circus]], [[Lambeth North tube station|Lambeth North]] or [[Elephant & Castle tube station|Elephant & Castle]] to the south.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.davros.org/rail/culg/bakerloo.html#services |title=CULG – Bakerloo Line |publisher=Clive's UndergrounD Line Guides |website=Davros.org |date=20 June 2017 |access-date=14 July 2017}}</ref>

The typical service pattern in trains per hour (tph) operated during off-peak hours is:<ref>{{cite web |url=http://content.tfl.gov.uk/wtt-42-bakerloo-21-may-2017.pdf |title=Bakerloo Line Working Timetable No. 42 |publisher=Transport for London |date=21 May 2017 |access-date=14 July 2017 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171013101427/http://content.tfl.gov.uk/wtt-42-bakerloo-21-may-2017.pdf |archive-date=13 October 2017}}</ref>
* 6 tph to Harrow & Wealdstone via Queen's Park and Stonebridge Park (Northbound)
* 3 tph to Stonebridge Park via Queen's Park (Northbound)
* 11 tph to Queen's Park (Northbound)
* 20 tph to Elephant & Castle (Southbound)
Weekday peak service operates with one or two additional Queen's Park-Elephant & Castle trains per hour, and Sunday service operates with two fewer Queen's Park-Elephant & Castle trains per hour during the core of the day.

=== Jubilee line ===
[[File:Baker_Street_tube_station_MMB_18_1996_Stock.jpg|thumb|right|A Jubilee line train standing at northbound platform 10.|alt=A couple is seen hugging and kissing on the Jubilee line platform.]]
On the Jubilee line, Baker Street station is between [[St John's Wood tube station|St John's Wood]] to the north and [[Bond Street station|Bond Street]] to the south. Southbound trains usually terminate at Stratford and North Greenwich although additional turn back points are provided at [[Green Park tube station|Green Park]], [[London Waterloo station|Waterloo]], [[London Bridge station|London Bridge]], [[Canary Wharf tube station|Canary Wharf]] and [[West Ham station|West Ham]]. Northbound trains usually terminate at Stanmore, Wembley Park and Willesden Green although additional turn back points are available at Finchley Road, West Hampstead and Neasden.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.davros.org/rail/culg/jubilee.html#services|title=CULG – Jubilee Line|website=www.davros.org|access-date=1 April 2017}}</ref>

As off the May 2022 timetable the typical off-peak service in trains per hour (tph) is:<ref name=":0">{{cite web |title=Jubilee line working timetable |url=https://content.tfl.gov.uk/wtt-18-jub-16-may-2022.pdf |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170227151500/http://content.tfl.gov.uk/wtt-14-jubilee-6-sep-2015.pdf |archive-date=27 February 2017 |website=Transport for London}}</ref>
* 24 tph Southbound to Stratford
* 12 tph Northbound to Stanmore
* 4 tph Northbound to West Hampstead
* 4 tph Northbound to Wembley Park
* 4 tph Northbound to Willesden Green
The [[Night Tube|Night tube]] service (Friday night to Saturday morning & Saturday night to Sunday morning) in trains per hour is:<ref name=":0" />
* 6 tph Southbound to Stratford
* 6 tph Northbound to Stanmore

=== Circle line ===
The station is between [[Great Portland Street tube station|Great Portland Street]] and [[Edgware Road tube station (Circle, District and Hammersmith & City lines)|Edgware Road]] on this line as well on the Hammersmith & City line.<ref name=tubemap />

The typical service in trains per hour is:<ref name=":1">{{cite web|url=http://content.tfl.gov.uk/wtt-34-circle-and-hammersmith-and-city.pdf|title=Circle and H'Smith & City line timetable|website=Transport for London|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161111061516/http://content.tfl.gov.uk/wtt-34-circle-and-hammersmith-and-city.pdf|archive-date=11 November 2016|url-status=dead|df=dmy-all}}</ref>
*6tph Clockwise to Edgware Road via King's Cross St Pancras, Liverpool Street, Tower Hill and [[London Victoria station|Victoria]]
*6tph Anti-clockwise to Hammersmith via Paddington

=== Hammersmith & City line ===
Between 1 October 1877 and 31 December 1906 some services on the H&CR were extended to [[Richmond station (London)|Richmond]] over the [[London and South Western Railway]] (L&SWR) via its station at [[Hammersmith (Grove Road) railway station|Hammersmith (Grove Road)]].{{sfn|Simpson|2003|p=43}}{{refn|The L&SWR tracks to Richmond now form part of the London Underground's District line. Stations between Hammersmith and Richmond served by the MR were [[Ravenscourt Park tube station|Ravenscourt Park]], [[Turnham Green tube station|Turnham Green]], [[Gunnersbury station|Gunnersbury]], and [[Kew Gardens station (London)|Kew Gardens]].{{sfn|Rose|2007}}|group="note"}}

The station is between [[Great Portland Street tube station|Great Portland Street]] and [[Edgware Road tube station (Circle, District and Hammersmith & City lines)|Edgware Road]] on this line, as with the Circle line.<ref name=tubemap />

The typical off-peak service in trains per hour (tph) is:<ref name=":1" />
*6 tph Eastbound to Barking or Plaistow
*6 tph Westbound to Hammersmith

=== Metropolitan line ===
[[File:Metropolitan line A60 and S Stocks by Tom Page.jpg|thumb|right|Old versus new: A60 stock on the left and S8 stock on the right. |alt=A southbound A60 stock Metropolitan line train stands on Platform 3. A terminating S8 stock train is on Platform 4 on the right.]]
[[File:At London 2024 100.jpg|thumb|right|The Metropolitan line platforms viewed from above, with a train at northbound platform 1.]]
The Metropolitan line is the only line to operate an express service although currently this is mostly southbound in the morning peaks and northbound in the evening peaks.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://content.tfl.gov.uk/watford-guide-dec18.pdf|title=Watford Tube Guide|publisher=Transport for London|access-date=6 July 2019}}</ref> Southbound fast services run non-stop between [[Moor Park tube station|Moor Park]], [[Harrow-on-the-Hill station|Harrow-on-the-Hill]] and [[Finchley Road tube station|Finchley Road]] whilst semi-fast services run non stop between Harrow-on-the-Hill and Finchley Road. Northbound fast and semi-fast services call additionally at [[Wembley Park tube station|Wembley Park]].<ref name=":2">{{cite web|url=http://www.davros.org/rail/culg/metropolitan.html#services|title=CULG – Metropolitan Line|website=www.davros.org|access-date=1 April 2017}}</ref>

The station is situated between [[Great Portland Street tube station|Great Portland Street]] sharing tracks with the [[Circle line (London Underground)|Circle]] and [[Hammersmith & City line|Hammersmith & City]] lines in the East and Finchley Road Station to the North. Southbound trains may terminate here and return north towards Uxbridge, Amersham, Chesham, or Watford, where platforms 1 and 4 are used.<ref name=jarriercarto/>

The off-peak service in trains per hour is:<ref name=":2" />
* 12 tph Southbound to Aldgate
* 4 tph Southbound services terminate here
* 2 tph Northbound to Amersham (all stations)
* 2 tph Northbound to Chesham (all stations)
* 4 tph Northbound to Watford (all stations)
* 8 tph Northbound to Uxbridge (all stations)

{{Adjacent stations|system=London Underground|noclear=y
|line1=Bakerloo|left1=Marylebone|right1=Regent's Park
|line2=Circle|left2=Edgware Road|right2=Great Portland Street|type2=section 1
|line3=Hammersmith & City|left3=Edgware Road|right3=Great Portland Street
|line4=Jubilee|left4=St John's Wood|right4=Bond Street
|line5=Metropolitan|left5=Finchley Road|right5=Great Portland Street|to-right5=Aldgate
|line6=Metropolitan|left6=Finchley Road
|header7=Former services
|system8=London Underground
|line8=Bakerloo|left8=St John's Wood|right8=Regent's Park|type8=Stanmore
|line9=Metropolitan|left9=Lord's|right9=Great Portland Street|type9=1868–1939|to-right9=Aldgate
|line10=Metropolitan|left10=Lord's|type10=1868–1939
|line11=Metropolitan|left11=Edgware Road|right11=Great Portland Street|to-left11=Hammersmith|to-right11=Barking|note-mid11=[[Metropolitan Railway#Hammersmith & City Railway|Hammersmith branch]] (1864–1990)
}}

== Connections ==
The station is served by [[London Buses]] day and night routes.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://content.tfl.gov.uk/bus-route-maps/baker-street-and-marylebone-a4-280821.pdf|title=Buses from Baker Street and Marylebone|date=28 August 2021|website=TfL|access-date=1 August 2022}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://content.tfl.gov.uk/bus-route-maps/baker-street-and-marylebone-night-a4-100721.pdf|title=Night buses from Baker Street and Marylebone|date=10 July 2021|website=TfL|access-date=1 August 2022}}</ref>

== Points of interest ==
*[[Royal Academy of Music]]
*[[Madame Tussauds]]
*[[Sherlock Holmes Museum]]
*[[Statue of Sherlock Holmes, London]]<ref name="reid19990922">{{Cite news |last=Reid |first=T.R. |author-link=T.R. Reid |date=22 September 1999 |title= Sherlock Holmes honored with statue near fictional London home |url= https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=xA8hAAAAIBAJ&pg=2790,5166715&dq=statue+sherlock-holmes+london&hl=en |access-date=6 January 2013 |work=The Day |location= New London, CT |pages=A4 |agency=The Washington Post |via=Google News}}</ref>

== In popular culture ==
[[File:Baker_Street_tube_station_platform_sign.jpg|thumb|Baker Street platform sign]]
The Metropolitan Bar above Baker Street station is featured in ''[[Metro-Land (1973 film)|Metro-Land]]'', a 1973 documentary film by [[John Betjeman]] in which he reminiscences about its genteel origins as the Chiltern Court Restaurant, which formed part of the block, [[Chiltern Court, Baker Street|Chiltern Court]], which Clark constructed above the station.<ref name="betjeman">{{cite book |last1=Betjeman |first1=John |last2=Games |first2=Stephen |title=Betjeman's England |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ksLVs3ItiNQC&q=chiltern%20court%20restaurant%20baker%20street%20metroland&pg=PT210 |publisher=John Murray Press |access-date=9 September 2019 |language=en |date=4 February 2010|isbn=9781848543805 }}</ref><ref name="bradley-chiltern" />

== See also ==
*[[Baker Street (song)]] by [[Gerry Rafferty]]

{{clear}}
== Notes and references ==

=== Notes ===
{{Reflist|group=note}}

=== References ===
{{reflist}}

=== Bibliography ===
*{{cite book |last=Badsey-Ellis |first=Antony |title=London's Lost Tube Schemes |year=2005 |publisher=Capital Transport |isbn=1-85414-293-3 }}
* {{cite book|last=Bruce|first=J Graeme|year=1983|title=Steam to Silver. A history of London Transport Surface Rolling Stock|publisher=Capital Transport|isbn=0-904711-45-5}}
*{{cite book |last1=Day |first1=John R. |last2=Reed |first2=John |title=The Story of London's Underground |edition=10th |year=2008 |orig-year=1963 |publisher=Capital Transport |isbn=978-1-85414-316-7 }}
*{{Cite book|last1=Demuth|first1=Tim|last2=Leboff|first2=David|title=No Need To Ask|publisher=Capital Transport|year=1999|isbn=185414-215-1|location=Harrow Weald}}
*{{cite book |last1=Edwards|first1=Dennis|last2=Pigram|first2=Ron|year=1988|publisher=[[Bloomsbury Publishing|Bloomsbury]]|title=The Golden Years of the Metropolitan Railway and the Metro-land Dream|isbn=1-870630-11-4}}
*{{cite magazine |author="Fowler's Ghost"<!-- a pseudonym -->|title=Railway connections at King's Cross (part one)|magazine=[[The Railway Magazine]]|date=May 1962|editor-first=B.W.C|editor-last=Cooke|publisher=Tothill Press|volume=108|issue=733}}
*{{cite book |last=Green|first=Oliver|year=1987|title=The London Underground: An illustrated history|publisher=[[Ian Allan Publishing|Ian Allan]]|isbn=0-7110-1720-4}}
* {{cite book |last=Horne |first=Mike |year=2001 |title=The Bakerloo Line: An Illustrated History |publisher=Capital Transport |isbn=1-85414-248-8 }}
*{{cite book|last=Horne|first=Mike|title=The Metropolitan Line: An Illustrated History|year=2003|publisher=Capital Transport|isbn=1-85414-275-5|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/metropolitanline00mike}}
*{{cite book |last=Horne|first=Mike|title=The District Line: An Illustrated History|year=2006|publisher=Capital Transport|isbn=1-85414-292-5}}
*{{cite book |title=London's Metropolitan Railway|last=Jackson|first=Alan|year=1986|publisher=David & Charles|isbn=0-7153-8839-8}}
*{{cite book |title=The Metropolitan District Railway|last=Lee|first=Charles E.|publisher=The Oakwood Press|year=1956b|asin=B0000CJGHS}}
*{{cite book |last=Rose|first=Douglas|title=The London Underground: A Diagrammatic History|edition=8th|date=December 2007|orig-year=1980|publisher=Capital Transport|isbn=978-1-85414-315-0}}
*{{cite book |last=Simpson|first=Bill|title=A History of the Metropolitan Railway. Volume 1: The Circle and Extended Lines to Rickmansworth.|publisher=Lamplight Publications|year=2003|isbn=1-899246-07-X}}
*{{cite book |title=New and Old London: Volume 5|first=Edward|last=Walford|year=1878|url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=45233|publisher=British History Online|access-date= 3 July 2012}}
*{{cite book |last=Wolmar|first=Christian|author-link=Christian Wolmar|year=2004|title=The Subterranean Railway: how the London Underground was built and how it changed the city forever|publisher=Atlantic|isbn=1-84354-023-1}}

==Further reading==
*{{cite magazine|title=The Queen visits Baker Street|magazine=The Railway Magazine|page=9|issue=1345|volume=159|date=May 2013|location=Horncastle|publisher=Mortons Media Group|issn=0033-8923|oclc=750645684}}

== External links ==
{{Commons category|Baker Street tube station}}
*Oldest Portion of Baker Street Station
**[http://www.scienceandsociety.co.uk/results.asp?image=10302139 As shown in 1863, Science and Society]
*[http://www.ltmcollection.org/photos/photo/photo.html?_IXSR_=NRmLE21FL6d&_IXMAXHITS_=1&IXinv=2000/21383&IXsummary=results/results&IXsearch=Baker%20street&_IXFIRST_=20 Baker Street and Waterloo Railway entrance, demolished in 1964. London Transport Museum]


[[de:Baker Street (London Underground)]]
{{navboxes|title=London Underground lines serving Baker Street|state=expanded|list1=
{{Bakerloo line navbox}}
[[fr:Baker Street (métro de Londres)]]
{{Circle line navbox}}
[[lmo:Baker Street tube station]]
{{Hammersmith & City line navbox}}
[[nl:Baker Street (metrostation)]]
{{Jubilee line navbox}}
[[no:Baker Street undergrunnsstasjon]]
{{Metropolitan line navbox}}
[[sk:Baker Street (stanica metra)]]
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{{Transport in London}}
[[Category:1863 establishments in England]]
[[Category:Bakerloo line stations]]
[[Category:Circle line (London Underground) stations]]
[[Category:Hammersmith & City line stations]]
[[Category:Metropolitan line stations]]
[[Category:Jubilee line stations]]
[[Category:London Underground Night Tube stations]]
[[Category:Tube stations in the City of Westminster]]
[[Category:Former Metropolitan Railway stations]]
[[Category:Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1863]]
[[Category:Former Baker Street and Waterloo Railway stations]]
[[Category:Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1906]]
[[Category:Grade II* listed railway stations]]
[[Category:Grade II* listed buildings in the City of Westminster]]
[[Category:Charles Walter Clark railway stations]]
[[Category:Baker Street]]

Latest revision as of 16:13, 6 January 2025

Baker Street London Underground
Station entrance
Baker Street is located in Central London
Baker Street
Baker Street
Location of Baker Street in Central London
LocationMarylebone
Local authorityCity of Westminster
Managed byLondon Underground
Number of platforms10
Fare zone1
OSIMarylebone National Rail[1]
London Underground annual entry and exit
2019Increase 28.07 million[2]
2020Decrease 8.48 million[3]
2021Increase 11.15 million[4]
2022Increase 20.52 million[5]
2023Increase 21.21 million[6]
Key dates
10 January 1863 (10 January 1863)Opened (MR)
April 1868Opened (MR platforms to north)
10 March 1906Opened (BS&WR, as terminus)
27 March 1907Extended (BSWR – Marylebone)
20 November 1939Started (Bakerloo to Stanmore)
1961Ended (Met to Aylesbury)
1 May 1979Ended (Bakerloo to Stanmore)
1 May 1979Started (Jubilee line)
30 July 1990Ended (Met to H'smith/Barking)
30 July 1990Started (Hammersmith & City)
Listed status
Listing gradeII* (since 28 June 2010)
Entry number1239815[7]
Added to list26 March 1987; 37 years ago (1987-03-26)
Other information
External links
Coordinates51°31′19″N 0°09′25″W / 51.522°N 0.157°W / 51.522; -0.157
London transport portal

Baker Street is a London Underground station at the junction of Baker Street and the Marylebone Road in the City of Westminster. It is one of the original stations of the Metropolitan Railway (MR), the world's first underground railway, opened on 10 January 1863.[8]

The station is in Travelcard Zone 1 and is served by five lines.[9] On the Circle and Hammersmith & City lines the station is between Edgware Road and Great Portland Street stations, and on the Metropolitan line it is between Finchley Road and Great Portland Street stations. On the Bakerloo line the station is between Marylebone and Regent's Park stations, and on the Jubilee line it is between St John's Wood and Bond Street stations.[9]

Location

[edit]
Map
Location of Baker Street station
The original Baker Street station entrances on each side of Marylebone Road, 1862

The station has entrances on Baker Street, Chiltern Street (ticket holders only) and Marylebone Road. Nearby attractions include Regent's Park, Lord's Cricket Ground, the Sherlock Holmes Museum and Madame Tussauds.

History

[edit]

Metropolitan Railway – the world's first underground railway

[edit]

In the first half of the 19th century, the population and physical extent of London grew greatly.[note 1] The congested streets and the distance to the city from the stations to the north and west prompted many attempts to get parliamentary approval to build new railway lines into the city.[note 2] In 1852, Charles Pearson planned a railway from Farringdon to King's Cross. Although the plan was supported by the city, the railway companies were not interested and the company struggled to proceed.[15] The Bayswater, Paddington, and Holborn Bridge Railway Company was established to connect the Great Western Railway's (GWR) Paddington station to Pearson's route at King's Cross.[15] A bill was published in November 1852[16] and in January 1853 the directors held their first meeting and appointed John Fowler as its engineer.[17] Several bills were submitted for a route between Paddington and Farringdon.[18] The company's name was also to be changed again, to Metropolitan Railway[15][19][note 3] and the route was approved on 7 August 1854.[18][20]

Sign on wall beside Marylebone Road beyond station entrance

Construction began in March 1860;[21] using the "cut-and-cover" method to dig the tunnel.[22][23] Despite several accidents during construction,[24] work was complete by the end of 1862 at a cost of £1.3 million.[25] Rail services through the station opened to the public on Saturday, 10 January 1863.[26][note 4]

In the next few years, extensions of the line were made at both ends with connections from Paddington to the GWR's Hammersmith and City Railway (H&CR) and at Gloucester Road to the District Railway (DR). From 1871, the MR and the DR operated a joint Inner Circle service between Mansion House and Moorgate Street.[8][note 5]

North-western "branch"

[edit]

In April 1868, the Metropolitan & St John's Wood Railway (M&SJWR) opened a single-track railway in tunnel to Swiss Cottage from new platforms at Baker Street East (which eventually become the present Metropolitan line platforms).[28][29] The line was worked by the MR with a train every 20 minutes. A junction was built with the original route at Baker Street, but there were no through trains after 1869.[30][note 6]

The M&SJWR branch was extended in 1879 to Willesden Green and, in 1880, to Neasden and Harrow-on-the-Hill.[33] Two years later, the single-track tunnel between Baker Street and Swiss Cottage was duplicated and the M&SJWR was absorbed by the MR.[34][note 7]

Bakerloo and Jubilee lines

[edit]
Route diagram which shows the original route of the Bakerloo line between Baker Street and Waterloo.

In November 1891, a private bill was presented to Parliament for the construction of the Baker Street and Waterloo Railway (BS&WR).[35] The railway was planned to run entirely underground from Marylebone[36] to Elephant & Castle[37] via Baker Street and Waterloo[35] and was approved in 1900.[38][39] Construction commenced in August 1898[40] under the direction of Sir Benjamin Baker, W. R. Galbraith and R. F. Church[41] with building work by Perry & Company of Tredegar Works, Bow.[41][note 8] Test trains began running in 1905.[45] The official opening of the BS&WR by Sir Edwin Cornwall took place on 10 March 1906.[46] The first section of the BS&WR was between Baker Street and Lambeth North.[47] Baker Street was the temporary northern terminus of the line until it was extended to Marylebone on 27 March 1907, a year after the rest of the line.[8][47] The BS&WR's station building designed by Leslie Green stood on Baker Street and served the tube platforms with lifts, but these were supplemented with escalators in 1914, linking the Metropolitan line and the Bakerloo line platforms by a new concourse excavated under the Metropolitan line.[48] An elaborately decorated restaurant and tea-room was added above Green's terminal building, the Chiltern Court Restaurant, which was opened in 1913.[49]

On 1 July 1933, the MR and BS&WR amalgamated with other Underground railways, tramway companies and bus operators to form the London Passenger Transport Board (LPTB), and the MR became the Metropolitan line, while the BS&WR became the Bakerloo line of London Transport.[50] However, there was a bottleneck on the Metropolitan line at Finchley Road where four tracks merge into two to Baker Street. LPTB decided to extend the Bakerloo line from Baker Street as a branch line, taking over the existing section between Finchley Road and Stanmore.[note 9] Construction began in April 1936. On 20 November 1939, following the construction of an additional southbound platform and connecting tube tunnels between Baker Street and Finchley Road stations, the Bakerloo line took over the Metropolitan line's stopping services between Finchley Road and Wembley Park and its Stanmore branch.[52] [53] The current Bakerloo ticket hall and escalators to the lower concourse were provided in conjunction with the new service.[54]

After the Victoria line had been completed in the 1960s, the new Jubilee line was proposed which would take a route via Baker Street, Bond Street, Trafalgar Square, Strand, Fleet Street, Ludgate Circus and Cannon Street, then proceeding into southeast London.[55] This new line was to have been called the Fleet line.[56] The Jubilee line added an extra northbound platform and replaced the Bakerloo line service to Stanmore from the station, opening on 1 May 1979.[8][57]

Circle and Hammersmith & City lines

[edit]

The initial route on the Hammersmith & City line was formed by the H&CR, running between Hammersmith and Moorgate. Services were eventually extended to Barking via the DR and shared with the existing MR tracks between Baker Street and Liverpool Street.[8] The route between Hammersmith and Barking was shown on the tube map as part of the Metropolitan line, but since 1990 has been shown separately, the Metropolitan line becoming the route from Aldgate to Baker Street and northwards through "Metro-Land" to Uxbridge, Watford and Amersham.[8][58]

The circle line was initially formed by the combination of the MR and DR routes, which were between Edgware Road and South Kensington, Edgware Road and Aldgate via King's Cross St Pancras, South Kensington and Mansion House,[59][60] and a joint railway between Mansion House and Aldgate.[61][8][62][63] Since 1949, the Circle line is shown separately on the map.[64]

Incidents

[edit]

On 18 June 1925, electric locomotive No.4 collided with a passenger train when a signal was changed from green to red just as the locomotive was passing it. Six people were injured.[65]

On 23 August 1973, a bomb was found in a carrier bag in the ticket hall.[66] The bomb was defused by the bomb squad. A week later, on 30 August, a member of staff found another bomb left on the overbridge. Again, it was defused without any injury.[67]

The station today

[edit]
Station entrance for Bakerloo and Jubilee lines on Marylebone Road
Baker street tube station
Metropolitan line platforms at the station

Baker Street station is the combination of three separate stations, with several booking offices throughout its operational years. Major changes took place in 1891-93 and 1910–12. The first part is the Circle Line station, which has its two platforms now used by the Circle and Hammersmith & City lines. They are situated on a roughly east-to-west alignment beneath Marylebone Road, spanning approximately the stretch between Upper Baker Street and Allsop Place. This was part of the original Metropolitan Railway from Bishop's Road (now Paddington (Circle and Hammersmith & City lines) station to Farringdon Street (now Farringdon) which opened on 10 January 1863.[68]

The platforms serving the main branch of the Metropolitan line towards Harrow, Uxbridge and beyond are located within the triangle formed by Marylebone Road, Upper Baker Street and Allsop Place, following the alignment of Allsop place. This station is the second section which opened on 13 April 1868 by the Metropolitan & St. John's Wood Railway. This was later absorbed by the Metropolitan Railway, which is usually known to them as Baker Street East station.[68]

The final section is the deep-level tube station of the Baker Street & Waterloo Railway (now part of the Bakerloo line), situated at a lower level beneath the site of Baker Street East, opened on 10 March 1906.[68] This part of the station now contains four platforms which are used by both the Bakerloo and Jubilee lines.[69]

This station is a terminus for some Metropolitan line trains, but there is also a connecting curve that joins to the Circle line just beyond the platforms, allowing Metropolitan line through services to run to Aldgate. The deep-level Bakerloo and Jubilee lines platforms are arranged in a cross-platform interchange layout[70] and there are track connections between the two lines just to the north of the station.[69] Access to the Bakerloo and Jubilee lines is only via escalators.[71]

A Hammersmith and City Line train to Barking arrives at Baker Street's oldest platforms opened in 1863

With ten platforms overall, Baker Street has the most amount of London Underground platforms of any station on the network.[72] Since Swiss Cottage and St John's Wood have replaced the former three stations between Finchley Road and Baker Street on the Metropolitan line, it takes an average of five and a half minutes to travel between them.[73] Essentially, the Metropolitan Line operates as a fast service while the Jubilee Line offers local service between the two stations.

As part of the Transported by Design programme of activities, on 15 October 2015, after two months of public voting, Baker Street underground station's platforms were elected by Londoners as one of the 10 favourite transport design icons.[74][75]

The former Chiltern Court Restaurant above the station is still in use today as the Metropolitan Bar, part of the Wetherspoons pub chain.[49] The rest of the block, known as Chiltern Court and completed by the Metropolitan Railway's in-house architect, Charles Walter Clark in 1929, houses residential apartments.[76]

Sub-surface platforms

[edit]
Unique tile-work in this station commemorates the fictional Sherlock Holmes's association with Baker Street

Of the MR's original stations, now the Circle and Hammersmith & City line platforms five and six are the best preserved dating from the station's opening in 1863. Plaques of the Metropolitan Railway's coat of arms along the platform and old plans and photographs depict the station which has changed remarkably little in over a hundred and fifty years.[77] Restoration work in the 1980s on the oldest portions of Baker Street station brought it back to something similar to its 1863 appearance.

The Metropolitan line's platforms one to four were largely the result of the station's rebuild in the 1920s to cater for the increase in traffic on its outer suburban routes. Today the basic layout remains the same with platforms two and three being through tracks for City services to Aldgate from Amersham, Chesham and Uxbridge flanked by terminal platforms one and four which are the domain of services to and from Watford. The northern end of the platforms is in a cutting being surrounded by Chiltern Court and Selbie House the latter of which houses Baker Street control centre responsible for signalling the Metropolitan line from Preston Road to Aldgate, as well as the Circle and Hammersmith & City lines between Baker Street and Aldgate. The southern end of the platforms are situated in a cut and cover tunnel which runs towards Great Portland Street. All Metropolitan line platforms can function as terminating tracks however under normal circumstance only dead ended platforms one and four are used as such.[78]

Deep-level tube platforms

[edit]

The Bakerloo line uses platforms 8 and 9,[citation needed] which date from 10 March 1906 when the Baker Street & Waterloo railway opened between here and Lambeth North (then called Kennington Road). The contraction of the name to "Bakerloo" rapidly caught on, and the official name was changed to match in July 1906.

By the mid-1930s, the Metropolitan line was suffering from congestion caused by the limited capacity of its tracks between Baker Street and Finchley Road stations. To relieve this pressure, the network-wide New Works Programme, 1935–1940 included the construction of new sections of tunnel between the Bakerloo line's platforms at Baker Street and Finchley Road and the replacement of three Metropolitan line stations (Lord's, Marlborough Road and Swiss Cottage) between those points with two new Bakerloo stations (St John's Wood and Swiss Cottage). The Bakerloo line also took over the Metropolitan line's service to Stanmore on 20 November 1939. The branch remained part of the Bakerloo line until 1 May 1979, when similar congestion problems for the Bakerloo line caused by the two branches converging at Baker Street led to the opening of the Jubilee line, initially created by connecting the Stanmore branch to new tunnels bored between Baker Street and Charing Cross. Following refurbishment in the 1980s the original tiling scheme was replaced with tiles depicting the silhouette of Sherlock Holmes, who lived at 221B Baker Street.

The Bakerloo still maintains its connection with the now Jubilee line tracks to Stanmore, with tunnels linking from Northbound Bakerloo line platform 9 to the Northbound Jubilee line toward St John's Wood and Southbound from Jubilee line platform seven to the Southbound Bakerloo line towards Regent's Park.[79] Although no passenger services operate over these sections they can be used for the transfer of engineering trains and were used to transfer Bakerloo line 1972 stock trains to and from Acton Works as part of a refurbishment programme.[80]

Jubilee line trains use platforms 7 and 10,[citation needed] which opened in 1979 when the newly built Jubilee line took over existing Bakerloo line services to Stanmore running through new tunnels from Baker Street to Charing Cross to serve as a relief line to the Bakerloo, which by then was suffering from capacity issues. In 1999 the Jubilee line was extended from Green Park to Stratford, making the Jubilee line platforms at Charing Cross redundant after twenty years. The design of the Jubilee line platforms at Baker Street has changed little since being opened, with illustrations depicting famous scenes from Sherlock Holmes cases.

Cross-platform interchange is provided between the Bakerloo and Jubilee lines in both directions.

Station improvements

[edit]

Step-free access project

[edit]

In 2008 TfL proposed a project to provide step-free access to the sub-surface platforms. The project was a TfL-funded Games-enabling project in its investment programme (and not a project specifically funded as a result of the success of the London 2012 Games bid).[81] The project was included in the strategy on accessible transport published by the London 2012 Olympic Delivery Authority and the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games.[82]

Access to the Metropolitan line platforms 1–4 (serving trains to and from Finchley Road) would be provided by a bridge from the Bakerloo and Jubilee line ticket hall, with a lift from the bridge to each island platform. Through a passage from platforms 1–2, this would also give step-free access to platform 5 (Circle and Hammersmith & City line eastbound trains). Access to platform 6 (Circle and Hammersmith & City line westbound trains) would be provided by demolishing the triangular building outside the station, on the north side of Marylebone Road, and taking over the public pedestrian subway under Marylebone Road to provide a link between a lift up from platform 5 to the subway and a lift at the other end of the subway down to platform 6. The replacement for the triangular building would also act as an emergency exit for the station.[83]

TfL applied for planning permission and listed building consent for providing access to platforms 5 and 6 on 1 October 2008, but the application was subsequently withdrawn. (The part of the proposed scheme to provide step-free access to platforms 1–4 is within TfL's permitted development rights, and so does not require planning permission.)[84] TfL announced on 31 March 2009 that because of budgetary constraints the step-free scheme would be deferred.[85]

Platform lengthening

[edit]

In order to accommodate the new, longer S stock trains, which started operating Metropolitan line services in August 2010, platforms 1 and 4 have been extended.[86] However, the Circle and Hammersmith & City line platforms 5 and 6 have not been extended to accommodate their new S7 Stock trains, due to the enclosed nature of the platforms. Instead, selective door operation is employed.

Services

[edit]

Bakerloo line

[edit]
A Bakerloo line train arriving at southbound platform 8.

On the Bakerloo line, Baker Street station is between Marylebone to the north and Regent's Park to the south.[9] Trains can terminate at Queen's Park, Stonebridge Park, or Harrow and Wealdstone to the north, and Piccadilly Circus, Lambeth North or Elephant & Castle to the south.[87]

The typical service pattern in trains per hour (tph) operated during off-peak hours is:[88]

  • 6 tph to Harrow & Wealdstone via Queen's Park and Stonebridge Park (Northbound)
  • 3 tph to Stonebridge Park via Queen's Park (Northbound)
  • 11 tph to Queen's Park (Northbound)
  • 20 tph to Elephant & Castle (Southbound)

Weekday peak service operates with one or two additional Queen's Park-Elephant & Castle trains per hour, and Sunday service operates with two fewer Queen's Park-Elephant & Castle trains per hour during the core of the day.

Jubilee line

[edit]
A couple is seen hugging and kissing on the Jubilee line platform.
A Jubilee line train standing at northbound platform 10.

On the Jubilee line, Baker Street station is between St John's Wood to the north and Bond Street to the south. Southbound trains usually terminate at Stratford and North Greenwich although additional turn back points are provided at Green Park, Waterloo, London Bridge, Canary Wharf and West Ham. Northbound trains usually terminate at Stanmore, Wembley Park and Willesden Green although additional turn back points are available at Finchley Road, West Hampstead and Neasden.[89]

As off the May 2022 timetable the typical off-peak service in trains per hour (tph) is:[90]

  • 24 tph Southbound to Stratford
  • 12 tph Northbound to Stanmore
  • 4 tph Northbound to West Hampstead
  • 4 tph Northbound to Wembley Park
  • 4 tph Northbound to Willesden Green

The Night tube service (Friday night to Saturday morning & Saturday night to Sunday morning) in trains per hour is:[90]

  • 6 tph Southbound to Stratford
  • 6 tph Northbound to Stanmore

Circle line

[edit]

The station is between Great Portland Street and Edgware Road on this line as well on the Hammersmith & City line.[9]

The typical service in trains per hour is:[91]

  • 6tph Clockwise to Edgware Road via King's Cross St Pancras, Liverpool Street, Tower Hill and Victoria
  • 6tph Anti-clockwise to Hammersmith via Paddington

Hammersmith & City line

[edit]

Between 1 October 1877 and 31 December 1906 some services on the H&CR were extended to Richmond over the London and South Western Railway (L&SWR) via its station at Hammersmith (Grove Road).[92][note 10]

The station is between Great Portland Street and Edgware Road on this line, as with the Circle line.[9]

The typical off-peak service in trains per hour (tph) is:[91]

  • 6 tph Eastbound to Barking or Plaistow
  • 6 tph Westbound to Hammersmith

Metropolitan line

[edit]
A southbound A60 stock Metropolitan line train stands on Platform 3. A terminating S8 stock train is on Platform 4 on the right.
Old versus new: A60 stock on the left and S8 stock on the right.
The Metropolitan line platforms viewed from above, with a train at northbound platform 1.

The Metropolitan line is the only line to operate an express service although currently this is mostly southbound in the morning peaks and northbound in the evening peaks.[93] Southbound fast services run non-stop between Moor Park, Harrow-on-the-Hill and Finchley Road whilst semi-fast services run non stop between Harrow-on-the-Hill and Finchley Road. Northbound fast and semi-fast services call additionally at Wembley Park.[94]

The station is situated between Great Portland Street sharing tracks with the Circle and Hammersmith & City lines in the East and Finchley Road Station to the North. Southbound trains may terminate here and return north towards Uxbridge, Amersham, Chesham, or Watford, where platforms 1 and 4 are used.[69]

The off-peak service in trains per hour is:[94]

  • 12 tph Southbound to Aldgate
  • 4 tph Southbound services terminate here
  • 2 tph Northbound to Amersham (all stations)
  • 2 tph Northbound to Chesham (all stations)
  • 4 tph Northbound to Watford (all stations)
  • 8 tph Northbound to Uxbridge (all stations)
Preceding station London Underground Following station
Marylebone Bakerloo line Regent's Park
Edgware Road
towards Hammersmith
Circle line
Great Portland Street
towards Edgware Road via Aldgate
Hammersmith & City line Great Portland Street
towards Barking
St John's Wood
towards Stanmore
Jubilee line Bond Street
towards Stratford
Finchley Road Metropolitan line Great Portland Street
towards Aldgate
Terminus
Former services
Preceding station London Underground Following station
St John's Wood
towards Stanmore
Bakerloo line
Stanmore branch (1939–1979)
Regent's Park
Lord's Metropolitan line
(1868–1939)
Great Portland Street
towards Aldgate
Terminus
Edgware Road
towards Hammersmith
Metropolitan line
Hammersmith branch (1864–1990)
Great Portland Street
towards Barking

Connections

[edit]

The station is served by London Buses day and night routes.[95][96]

Points of interest

[edit]
[edit]
Baker Street platform sign

The Metropolitan Bar above Baker Street station is featured in Metro-Land, a 1973 documentary film by John Betjeman in which he reminiscences about its genteel origins as the Chiltern Court Restaurant, which formed part of the block, Chiltern Court, which Clark constructed above the station.[98][49]

See also

[edit]

Notes and references

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ In 1801, approximately one million people lived in the area that is now Greater London. By 1851 this had doubled.[10] The increasing resident population and the development of a commuting population arriving by train each day led to a high level of traffic congestion with huge numbers of carts, cabs, and omnibuses filling the roads and up to 200,000 people entering the City of London, the commercial heart, each day on foot.[11]
  2. ^ None were successful, and the 1846 Royal Commission on Metropolitan Railway Termini banned construction of new lines or stations in the built-up central area.[12][13] The concept of an underground railway linking the City with the mainline termini was first proposed in the 1830s.[14]
  3. ^ The original established name was the "North Metropolitan Railway".[18]
  4. ^ The railway included a ceremonial run from Paddington and a large banquet for 600 shareholders and guests at Farringdon a day earlier.[27] These platforms are now served by the Circle and Hammersmith & City lines.[8]
  5. ^ After further extensions by the Metropolitan Railway to Liverpool Street (1875), Aldgate (1876) and Tower of London (1882), the Inner Circle was completed in 1884.[8]
  6. ^ The original intention of the M&SJWR was to run underground north-east to Hampstead Village, and indeed this appeared on some maps.[31] This was not completed in full and the line was built in a north-western direction instead; a short heading of tunnel was built north of Swiss Cottage station in the direction of Hampstead.[32] This is still visible today when travelling on a southbound Metropolitan line service.
  7. ^ Further extensions took the Metropolitan Railway to Pinner (1885), Rickmansworth (1887), Chesham (1889), Aylesbury (1892), Uxbridge (1904) and Watford (1925).[8]
  8. ^ By November 1899, the northbound tunnel reached Trafalgar Square and work on some of the station sites was started, but the collapse of the L&GFC in 1900 led to works gradually coming to a halt. When the UERL was formed in April 1902, 50 per cent of the tunnelling and 25 per cent of the station work was completed.[42] With funds in place, work restarted and proceeded at a rate of 73 feet (22.25 m) per week,.[43] By February 1904, most of the tunnels and underground parts of the stations between Elephant & Castle and Marylebone were complete and works on the station buildings were in progress.[44] The additional stations were incorporated as work continued elsewhere.[45]
  9. ^ In 1929, construction of a spur line from Wembley Park to Stanmore began.[51] It opened on 10 December 1932.[8]
  10. ^ The L&SWR tracks to Richmond now form part of the London Underground's District line. Stations between Hammersmith and Richmond served by the MR were Ravenscourt Park, Turnham Green, Gunnersbury, and Kew Gardens.[8]

References

[edit]
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Bibliography

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  • Badsey-Ellis, Antony (2005). London's Lost Tube Schemes. Capital Transport. ISBN 1-85414-293-3.
  • Bruce, J Graeme (1983). Steam to Silver. A history of London Transport Surface Rolling Stock. Capital Transport. ISBN 0-904711-45-5.
  • Day, John R.; Reed, John (2008) [1963]. The Story of London's Underground (10th ed.). Capital Transport. ISBN 978-1-85414-316-7.
  • Demuth, Tim; Leboff, David (1999). No Need To Ask. Harrow Weald: Capital Transport. ISBN 185414-215-1.
  • Edwards, Dennis; Pigram, Ron (1988). The Golden Years of the Metropolitan Railway and the Metro-land Dream. Bloomsbury. ISBN 1-870630-11-4.
  • "Fowler's Ghost" (May 1962). Cooke, B.W.C (ed.). "Railway connections at King's Cross (part one)". The Railway Magazine. Vol. 108, no. 733. Tothill Press.
  • Green, Oliver (1987). The London Underground: An illustrated history. Ian Allan. ISBN 0-7110-1720-4.
  • Horne, Mike (2001). The Bakerloo Line: An Illustrated History. Capital Transport. ISBN 1-85414-248-8.
  • Horne, Mike (2003). The Metropolitan Line: An Illustrated History. Capital Transport. ISBN 1-85414-275-5.
  • Horne, Mike (2006). The District Line: An Illustrated History. Capital Transport. ISBN 1-85414-292-5.
  • Jackson, Alan (1986). London's Metropolitan Railway. David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-8839-8.
  • Lee, Charles E. (1956b). The Metropolitan District Railway. The Oakwood Press. ASIN B0000CJGHS.
  • Rose, Douglas (December 2007) [1980]. The London Underground: A Diagrammatic History (8th ed.). Capital Transport. ISBN 978-1-85414-315-0.
  • Simpson, Bill (2003). A History of the Metropolitan Railway. Volume 1: The Circle and Extended Lines to Rickmansworth. Lamplight Publications. ISBN 1-899246-07-X.
  • Walford, Edward (1878). New and Old London: Volume 5. British History Online. Retrieved 3 July 2012.
  • Wolmar, Christian (2004). The Subterranean Railway: how the London Underground was built and how it changed the city forever. Atlantic. ISBN 1-84354-023-1.

Further reading

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  • "The Queen visits Baker Street". The Railway Magazine. Vol. 159, no. 1345. Horncastle: Mortons Media Group. May 2013. p. 9. ISSN 0033-8923. OCLC 750645684.
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