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Coordinates: 51°31′42″N 0°07′59″W / 51.5284°N 0.1331°W / 51.5284; -0.1331
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{{Short description|Central London railway terminus}}
{{London stations|
{{redirect|Euston station|the nearby London Underground stations|Euston tube station|and|Euston Square tube station|the station in Dublin, Ireland|Heuston railway station}}
name = [[Image:Euston_logo.gif]] London Euston|
{{good article}}
image = [[Image:Euston station facade.jpg|300px|Euston]] |
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2021}}
manager = [[Network Rail]] |
{{Use British English|date=October 2015}}
zone = [[Travelcard Zone 1|1]] |
{{Infobox London station
locale = [[Euston Square]] |
| name = Euston
borough = [[London Borough of Camden]] |
start = 1837 |
| symbol = rail
| symbol2 = overground
platforms = 18 |
exits = 27.787 }}
| alt_name = London Euston
| manager = [[Network Rail]]
[[Image:Euston_logo.gif]] '''Euston station''', also known as '''London Euston''', is a major [[railway station]] to the north of central [[London]] in the [[London Borough of Camden]]. It is one of 17 British railway stations managed by [[Network Rail]], and is the southern terminus of the [[West Coast Main Line]]. Euston is the main rail gateway from London to the [[West Midlands]], the [[North West England|North West]] and southern [[Scotland]].
| manager1 =
| manager2 =
| owner =
| owner1 =
| owner2 =
| locale = [[Euston Road]]
| borough = [[London Borough of Camden]]
| platforms = 16
| access = yes
| access_note =<ref>{{citation step free south east rail}}</ref>
| fare_zone = 1
| fare_zone_1 =
| railcode = EUS
| railcode2 =
| dft_category = A
| image_name = File:Euston Station (49445780187).jpg
| image_alt = Side on view of a station entrance with a statue
| caption = Station entrance in 2017, with the statue of [[Robert Stephenson]]
| coordinates = {{coord|51.5284|-0.1331|type:railwaystation_region:GB|display=inline,title}}
| map_type = Central London
| years1 = 20 July 1837
| years2 = 1849
| years3 = 1962–1968
| years4 =
| years5 =
| years6 =
| years7 =
| years8 =
| years9 =
| events1 = Opened
| events2 = Expanded
| events3 = Rebuilt
| events4 =
| events5 =
| events6 =
| events7 =
| events8 =
| events9 =
| original = [[London & Birmingham Railway]]
| pregroup = [[London & North Western Railway]]
| postgroup = [[London Midland & Scottish Railway]]
| cyclepark = Yes – platforms 17–18 and external
| toilets = Yes
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| tubeexits03 =
| tubeexits04 =
| tubeexits05 =
| tubeexits06 =
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| tubeexits08 =
| interchange = [[Euston tube station|Euston]] {{rail-interchange|london|underground}}
| interchange1 = [[Euston Square tube station|Euston Square]] {{rail-interchange|london|underground}}
| interchange2 = [[St Pancras railway station|St Pancras]] {{rail-interchange|london|rail}}
| interchange3 = [[London King's Cross railway station|King's Cross]] {{rail-interchange|london|rail}}
| interchange_note =<ref>{{Citation London station interchange June 2020}}</ref>
}}
'''Euston railway station''' ({{IPAc-en|'|j|uː|s|t|ən}} {{respell|YOO|stən}}; or '''London Euston''') is a major [[London station group|central London railway terminus]] managed by [[Network Rail]] in the [[London Borough of Camden]]. It is the southern terminus of the [[West Coast Main Line]], the UK's busiest inter-city railway. Euston is the [[List of busiest railway stations in Great Britain|tenth-busiest station in Britain]] and the country's busiest inter-city passenger terminal, being the gateway from [[London]] to the [[West Midlands (region)|West Midlands]], [[North West England]], [[North Wales]] and [[Scotland]].


Intercity express passenger services to the major cities of [[Birmingham]], [[Manchester]], [[Liverpool]], [[Glasgow]] and [[Edinburgh]], and through services to {{rws|Holyhead}} for connecting ferries to [[Dublin]] are operated by [[Avanti West Coast]]. Overnight sleeper services to Scotland are provided by the [[Caledonian Sleeper]]. [[West Midlands Trains|London Northwestern Railway]] provide commuter and regional services to the West Midlands, whilst the [[Lioness line]] of the [[London Overground]] provides local suburban services in the London area via the [[Watford DC Line]] which runs parallel to the West Coast Main Line as far as {{rws|Watford Junction}}. [[Euston tube station]] is connected to the main concourse and [[Euston Square tube station]] is nearby. [[London King's Cross railway station|King's Cross]] and [[St Pancras railway station|St Pancras]] railway stations are about {{convert|1/2|mile|m|abbr=off}} east along [[Euston Road]].
It is connected to [[Euston tube station]] and near [[Euston Square tube station]] of the [[London Underground]]. These stations are in [[Travelcard Zone 1]].


Euston, the first inter-city railway terminal in London, was planned by [[George Stephenson|George]] and [[Robert Stephenson]]. It was designed by [[Philip Hardwick]] and built by [[William Cubitt (politician)|William Cubitt]], with a distinctive [[Euston Arch|arch]] over the station entrance. The station opened as the terminus of the [[London and Birmingham Railway]] (L&BR) on 20 July 1837. Euston was expanded after the L&BR was amalgamated with other companies to form the [[London and North Western Railway]], and the original sheds were replaced by the Great Hall in 1849. Capacity was increased throughout the 19th century from two platforms to fifteen. The station was controversially rebuilt in the mid-1960s when the Arch and the Great Hall were demolished to accommodate the electrified West Coast Main Line, and the revamped station still attracts criticism over its architecture. Euston is to be the London terminus for the planned [[High Speed 2]] railway and the station is being redeveloped to accommodate it.
==Services==
Three train companies operate from Euston:


== Name and location ==
[[Virgin Trains]]: Inter-city services on the West Coast Main Line. Principal towns and cities served include [[Birmingham]], [[Rugby]], [[Crewe]], [[Chester]], [[Manchester]], [[Liverpool]], [[Preston]], [[Carlisle]] and [[Glasgow]].
The station is named after [[Euston Hall]] in Suffolk, the ancestral home of the [[Dukes of Grafton]], the main landowners in the area during the mid-19th century.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.eustonhall.co.uk/the-family_16379.html|title=The Family|publisher=Euston Hall, Suffolk|access-date=9 July 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170604075047/http://www.eustonhall.co.uk/the-family_16379.html|archive-date=4 June 2017|url-status=dead}}</ref> It is set back from [[Euston Square]] and [[Euston Road]] on the [[London Inner Ring Road]], between Cardington Street and Eversholt Street in the [[London Borough of Camden]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.google.co.uk/maps/@51.5285673,-0.1340016,17.5z|title=Euston Station|publisher=Google Maps|access-date=13 July 2017}}</ref> It is one of 20 stations managed by [[Network Rail]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.networkrail.co.uk/managed-stations/ |title=Commercial information |date=April 2014 |work=Our Stations |publisher=Network Rail |location=London |access-date=12 April 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140410040141/http://www.networkrail.co.uk/managed-stations/ |archive-date=10 April 2014 }}</ref> As of the 2022-23 estimates of station usage, it is the [[List of busiest railway stations in Great Britain|tenth-busiest station in Britain]]{{efn|The busier stations were {{stn|Liverpool Street}}, [[London Paddington station|Paddington]], [[London Waterloo station|Waterloo]], {{stn|London Bridge}}, [[London Victoria station|Victoria]], {{stn|Stratford}}, {{stn|Tottenham Court Road}}, {{rws|St Pancras}} and {{stn|Farringdon}}.}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-67716815 |title=Liverpool Street becomes Britain's busiest station |website=BBC News|date=14 December 2023|access-date=22 December 2023}}</ref> It is the eighth-busiest terminus in London by entries and exits.<ref name="network_rail">{{cite web |url= http://www.networkrail.co.uk/managed-stations/ |title= Stations Run by Network Rail |publisher= [[Network Rail]] |access-date= 23 August 2009 |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140410040141/http://www.networkrail.co.uk/managed-stations/ |archive-date= 10 April 2014 |df= dmy-all }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/stations/EUS/details.html |title=Station facilities for London Euston |publisher= National Rail Enquiries |access-date=29 May 2013 }}</ref> [[Euston bus station]] is in front of the main entrance.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://tfl.gov.uk/bus/stop/490G000652/euston-bus-station|title=Euston Bus Station|work=Transport for London}}</ref>


== History ==
[[Silverlink]] has two divisions:
Euston was the first inter-city railway station in London. It opened on 20 July 1837 as the terminus of the [[London and Birmingham Railway]] (L&BR).<ref name=NREuston/> It was demolished in the 1960s and replaced with the present building in the [[International Style (architecture)|international modern]] style.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=54}}
:''Silverlink Metro'': Local commuter services to and from local stations in north west London using the slow tracks of the West Coast Main Line or the adjacent [[Watford DC Line]].<br>
:''Silverlink County'': Longer distance commuter services on the West Coast Main line serving [[Buckinghamshire]], [[Bedfordshire]], [[Hertfordshire]] and [[Northamptonshire]]. Main towns served include [[Watford]], [[Tring]], [[Hemel Hempstead]], [[Milton Keynes]] and [[Northampton]]. It also has an unusual joint stopping service with [[Central Trains]] to [[Liverpool]] via [[Tamworth]].


The site was chosen in 1831 by [[George Stephenson|George]] and [[Robert Stephenson]], engineers of the L&BR. The area was mostly farmland at the edge of the expanding city, and adjacent to the [[New Road, London|New Road]] (now [[Euston Road]]), which had caused urban development.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=31}}{{sfn|British Rail|1968|p=5}} The name Euston came from [[Euston Hall]], the seat of the [[duke of Grafton]], who owned the locality.
[[First Scotrail]]: Sleeper services to and from [[Scotland]], terminating at either Glasgow, [[Aberdeen]] (via [[Edinburgh]]), [[Fort William, Scotland|Fort William]] or [[Inverness]].


The station and railway have been owned by the L&BR (1837–1846),{{sfn|British Rail|1968|p=8}} the [[London and North Western Railway]] (LNWR) (1846–1923), the [[London, Midland and Scottish Railway]] (LMS) (1923–1948),{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=46}} [[British Railways]] (1948–1994), [[Railtrack]] (1994–2002)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rail.co.uk/rail-news/2016/brexit/|title=Brexit to bring back BR? What could the vote mean for our railways|publisher=rail.co.uk|date=24 June 2016|access-date=14 July 2017|archive-date=26 January 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210126115659/http://www.rail.co.uk/rail-news/2016/brexit/|url-status=dead}}</ref> and Network Rail (2002–present).<ref name=nr>{{cite journal|url=https://www.financialdirector.co.uk/2014/03/11/interview-network-rail-cfo-patrick-butcher/|title=Interview: Network Rail CFO Patrick Butcher|journal=Financial Director|date=26 March 2014|access-date=14 July 2017}}</ref>
==History==
Although the present station building is in the [[International style (architecture)|International Modern]] style, Euston was the first inter-city railway station to be built in London.


===Old building===
=== Old station ===
[[Image:Euston Station showing wrought iron roof of 1837.jpg|thumb|right|250px|An early print of Euston showing the [[wrought iron]] roof of 1837. Note the open carriages.]]
[[File:Euston Station showing wrought iron roof of 1837.jpg|thumb|left|An early print of Euston showing the [[wrought iron]] roof of 1837]]
[[Image:Euston Station - The Great Hall.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The former Great Hall of Euston Station.]]
The original station was opened on [[July 20]], [[1837]], as the terminus of the [[London and Birmingham Railway]] constructed by [[Robert Stephenson]]. It was designed by a well-known classically trained architect, [[Philip Hardwick]], with a 200-[[Foot (unit of length)|ft]] ([[1 E1 m|61 m]]) long engine shed by structural engineer [[Charles Fox]]. Initially it had only two platforms, one for departures and one for arrivals. A 72-ft (22 m) high [[Doric]] propylaeum - designed by Hardwick - was erected at the station's entrance to serve as a portico; this became renowned as the [[Euston Arch]]. Interestingly, Stephenson's original plan was to route the railway through north London so that it terminated where [[Kings Cross station|King's Cross]] station currently stands, but after encountering severe opposition from landowners, he was forced to build the railway through [[Tring]], [[Watford]] and [[Harrow]], and terminating at its present site at Euston.


The plan was to construct a station near the [[Regent's Canal]] in [[Islington]] to provide a connection for London dock traffic. An alternative site at [[Marble Arch]], proposed by Robert Stephenson, was rejected by a provisional committee, and a proposal to end the line at [[Maiden Lane railway stations|Maiden Lane]] was rejected by the House of Lords in 1832. A terminus at [[Camden Town]], announced by Stephenson the following year, received royal assent on 6 May, before an extension was approved in 1834, allowing the line to reach Euston Grove where the original station was built by [[William Cubitt (politician)|William Cubitt]].{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=31}}{{sfn|British Rail|1968|p=5}}
Until [[1844]], trains had to be pulled up the hill to [[Camden Town]] by cables as they did not have enough power to get there under their own steam.


Initial services were three trains to and from {{rws|Boxmoor}} with journeys taking just over an hour. On 9 April 1838, they were extended to a temporary halt at {{rws|Denbigh Hall}} near [[Bletchley]] where a coach service was provided to {{rws|Rugby}}. The line to [[Birmingham Curzon Street railway station (1838-1966)|Curzon Street]] station in [[Birmingham]] opened on 17 September 1838, the journey of {{convert|112|miles}} took around {{frac|5|1|4}} hours.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=38}}
The station grew rapidly over the following years as traffic increased. It was greatly expanded in the [[1840s]], with the opening in [[1849]] of the spectacular Great Hall (designed by Hardwick's son, [[Philip Charles Hardwick]]), built in [[classical architecture|classical]] style. It was 125 ft long, 61 ft wide and 62 ft high (38.1 m by 18.6 m by 18.9 m), with a coffered ceiling and a sweeping double flight of stairs leading to offices at the northern end of the hall. The station was further from Euston Road than the front of the modern complex; it was on Drummond Street, which now terminates at the side of the station, but then ran all the way across the front it. A short road called Euston Road ran from [[Euston Square]] towards the arch. Two hotels, the Euston Hotel and the Victoria Hotel, flanked the northern half of this approach.


The incline from Camden Town to Euston involved crossing the Regent's Canal on a gradient of more than 1 in 68. Because steam trains at the time could not climb such an ascent, they were cable-hauled on the down line towards Camden until 1844, after which bank engines were used.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=32}} The L&BR's act of Parliament prohibited the use of locomotives in the Euston area, following concerns of residents about noise and smoke from locomotives toiling up the incline.<ref>{{cite web |title= London and Birmingham Railway |url= http://www.crht1837.org/history/lbr |publisher= Camden Railway Heritage Trust |access-date= 22 February 2013 |archive-date= 26 January 2021 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20210126112624/http://www.crht1837.org/history/lbr |url-status= dead }}</ref>
The station and the railway that it served experienced several changes in management, being owned in turn by the [[London and North Western Railway]] ([[1846]]&ndash;[[1922]]), the [[London, Midland and Scottish Railway]] ([[1923]]&ndash;[[1947]]), [[British Rail]] ([[1947]]&ndash;[[1994]]), [[Railtrack]] ([[1994]]&ndash;[[2001]]) and [[Network Rail]] ([[2001]]&ndash;)


[[File:Euston Arch 1896.jpg|thumb|"[[Euston Arch]]": the original entrance to Euston Station (photographed in 1896)]]
===New building===
[[Image:Euston Station - 1851 - from Project Gutenberg - eText 13271.jpg|right|thumb|250px|"[[Euston Arch]]:" the original entrance to Euston Station, as enlarged, ''ca'' 1851]]
In the early [[1960s]] it was decided that the old building was no longer adequate and needed replacing. Amid much public outcry the old station building (including the famous Euston Arch) was demolished in [[1962]] and replaced by a new building, which opened in [[1968]]. Its opening coincided with the electrification of the West Coast Main Line, and the new structure was deliberately intended to symbolise the coming of the "electric age".


The station was built with space left vacant for extra platforms, as it was originally planned for the [[Great Western Railway]] (GWR) to use Euston, as the terminus of the [[Great Western Main Line]]. In the event, the GWR chose to build their own terminus at [[London Paddington station|Paddington]]. The spare land was instead used for more platforms for ever expanding services as the railway network grew.<ref name="Jenkins L&BR">{{cite book |last1=Jenkinson |first1=David |title=The London & Birmingham Railway{{snd}} A Railway of Consequence |date=1988 |publisher=Capital Transport Publishing |isbn=185414-102-3 |pages=21–38}}</ref>
The loss of the original station helped galvanize the environmental conservation movement in Britain, which had previously been focused on preserving aristocratic houses, picturesque vernacular architecture and unspoilt landscapes. The loss of the original [[New York Penn Station]] in the United States has been referenced as comparable.


The station building, designed by the classically trained architect [[Philip Hardwick]],{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=35}}{{sfn|Cole|2011|p=107}} had a {{convert|200|ft|m|adj=mid|-long}} trainshed by structural engineer [[Charles Fox (civil and railway engineer)|Charles Fox]]. It had two {{convert|420|ft|m|adj=mid|-long}} platforms, one each for departures and arrival. The main entrance portico, the [[Euston Arch]], also by Hardwick, symbolised the arrival of a major new transport system and was "the gateway to the north".{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=37}} It was {{convert|72|ft|m}} high, supported on four {{cvt|44|ft|2|in}} by {{cvt|8|ft|6|in}} hollow [[Doric order|Doric]] [[Propylaea|propylaeum]] columns of [[Bramley Fall stone]], the largest ever built.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|pp=35–37}}{{sfn|Pile|2005|p=232}} It was completed in May 1838 and cost £35,000 (now £{{inflation|UK|35000|1838|fmt=c|r=-3}}).{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=37}} The old station building was probably the first one in the world with all-[[wrought iron]] roof [[trusses]].{{sfn | Bussell | 2008 | p=179}}
The modern station is very much a piece of [[1960s]] architecture. It is a long, low structure with a frontage of some 647 ft. Part of the station building includes two office towers that look out onto adjacent Melton Street and Eversholt Street, and are home to [[Network Rail]]. All of these buildings are in a functional style and the main facing material is polished dark stone, which is complemented with white tiles, exposed concrete and plain glazing. The station has a single large concourse populated with the usual assortment of shops and eateries, and is separate from the train shed. A couple of small remnants of the older station were kept, two [[Portland stone]] entrance lodges and a war memorial on Euston Road, but were hardly an effective sop to those offended by the loss of the former building. The frontage of the station building is hidden behind office buildings and a bus station.
[[Image:Euston station concourse.jpg|right|thumb|right|250px|Euston station concourse]]
Euston is regarded by some as ugly and unpleasant. The ramps that descend from the concourse down to platform level seem claustrophobic to many and the trainshed is low-ceilinged, making no attempt to match the airy style of London's major 19th-century trainsheds. However, attention was paid to certain practicalities. The positioning of the departure board aids the flow of passengers by encouraging those who are waiting to keep well back from the busy platform entrances. The Undergound station, taxi rank and car park are all directly within the building and a secondary walkway under the main concourse provides passengers leaving suburban trains with a shortcut to the Tube. The positioning of the platforms helps keep the station warm and dry, while the access ramps have room for passengers to queue without obstructing the main concourse. The station has 18 platforms, with 8 - 11 being used exclusively for Silverlink commuter services, and are therefore equipped with automatic ticket gates, and the aforementioned shortcut to the Underground station. Two of the platforms are extra-length in order to accommodate the 12-car Caledonian Sleeper services.


The first railway hotels in London were built at Euston. Two hotels designed by Hardwick opened in 1839 on either side of the Arch; the Victoria on the west had basic facilities while the Euston on the east was designed for first-class passengers.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=39}}
The exterior of the shed is windowless and monotonous dark brick and corrugated metal, more typical of an industrial estate than a major metropolitan building. The concrete-adorned square outside the front entrance is a popular stamping ground for beggars (who also frequent the station concourse itself), and rough sleepers.


[[File:Euston Station (Great Hall).jpg|thumb|150px|left|The Great Hall, Euston Station]]
===Privatisation===
Between 1838 and 1841, parcel handling grew from 2,700 parcels a month to 52,000.{{sfn|British Rail|1968|p=8}} By 1845, 140 staff were employed but trains began to run late because of a lack of capacity.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=39}} The following year, two platforms (later 9 and 10) were constructed on vacant land to the west of the station that had been reserved for [[Great Western Railway]] services.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=40}} The L&BR amalgamated with the [[Manchester & Birmingham Railway]] and the [[Grand Junction Railway]] in 1846 to form the LNWR. The company headquarters were established at Euston requiring a block of offices to be built between the Arch and the platforms.{{sfn|British Rail|1968|p=8}}
Following [[privatisation]] of the railways in the [[1990s]], the station was taken over by [[Railtrack]] and was subsequently transferred to [[Network Rail]]. In 2005 Network Rail was reported to have long-term aspirations to redevelop the station, removing the 1960s buildings and providing a great deal more commercial space by utilising the "airspace rights" above the platforms, but there are many major office projects in London at a more advanced stage of planning, so this project is unlikely to proceed for many years.


The station's facilities were expanded with the opening of the Great Hall on 27 May 1849 replacing the original sheds. The Great Hall was designed by Hardwick's son [[Philip Charles Hardwick]] in [[classical architecture|classical]] style. It was {{convert|125|ft|m|abbr=on}} long, {{convert|61|ft|m|1|abbr=on}} wide, and {{convert|62|ft|m|1|abbr=on}} high with a [[coffer]]ed ceiling and a sweeping double flight of stairs leading to offices at its northern end.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=40}} Architectural sculptor [[John Thomas (sculptor)|John Thomas]] contributed eight allegorical statues representing the cities served by the line.{{sfn|Biddle|Nock|1983|p=214}} The station faced Drummond Street, further back from Euston Road than the front of the modern complex; Drummond Street now terminates at the side of the station but then ran across its front.<ref>[http://www.motco.com/map/81006/SeriesSearchPlatesFulla.asp?mode=query&artist=390&other=498&x=11&y=11 www.motco.com] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160118122454/http://www.motco.com/map/81006/SeriesSearchPlatesFulla.asp?mode=query&artist=390&other=498&x=11&y=11 |date=18 January 2016 }} – 1862 map, showing position of 1849 station.</ref> A short road, Euston Grove, ran from Euston Square towards the arch.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ucl.ac.uk/sts/staff/cain/projects/euston_grove|title=Euston Grove, History of a Street|first=Joe|last=Cain|publisher=University College London|access-date=13 July 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170915051530/http://www.ucl.ac.uk/sts/staff/cain/projects/euston_grove|archive-date=15 September 2017|url-status=dead}}</ref>
In December 2005 [[Network Rail]] announced plans [http://www.alwaystouchout.com/project/125 (1)] to create a subway link between the station and [[Euston Square]] tube station as part of the re-development of Euston station, which would create a direct link between the two Euston stations which at the moment consists of a five minute walk along a Euston Road.


A bay platform (later platform 7) for local services to [[Kensington (Olympia) station|Kensington (Addison Road)]] opened in 1863.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=42}} Two new platforms (1 and 2) were added in 1873 along with an entrance for cabs from Seymour Street. At the same time, the station roof was raised by {{convert|6|ft}} to accommodate smoke from the engines.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=43}}
==London Underground==
{{main|Euston tube station}}
{{main|Euston Square tube station}}
Euston station is directely connected to, and above, [[Euston tube station]], which is served by the [[Victoria Line]] and [[Northern Line]] City Branch of the [[London Underground]].


The continued growth of long-distance railway traffic led to major expansion along the station's west side starting in 1887. It involved rerouting Cardington Street over part of the burial ground (later St James's Gardens)<ref>Location of St James's burial ground {{Coord|51.52849|-0.13702|region:GB|name=St James's Park}}</ref> of [[St James's Church, Piccadilly]],<ref name="UKG">{{cite web |title=Remains of Captain Matthew Flinders discovered at HS2 site in Euston |url=https://www.gov.uk/government/news/remains-of-captain-matthew-flinders-discovered-at-hs2-site-in-euston |publisher=UK Government |access-date=26 January 2019 |language=en |date=25 January 2019}}</ref> which was located some way from the church.<ref>{{cite book|chapter=St. James Church, Hampstead Road|title=Survey of London: volume 21: The parish of St Pancras part 3: Tottenham Court Road & Neighbourhood|year=1949|pages=123–136|url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=65195|access-date=15 December 2012}}</ref> To avoid public outcry, the remains were reinterred at [[St Pancras Cemetery]].{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=43}} Two more platforms (4 and 5) opened in 1891.{{sfn|McCarthy|McCarthy|2009|p=71}} Four departure platforms (now platforms 12–15), bringing the total to 15, and a booking office on Drummond Street opened on 1 July 1892.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=43}}<ref name=NREuston>{{cite web |title= Euston Station, London |url= http://www.networkrail.co.uk/virtualarchive/euston-station/ |publisher= Network Rail |access-date= 22 February 2013 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20130218141801/http://www.networkrail.co.uk/virtualarchive/euston-station/ |archive-date= 18 February 2013 |url-status= dead }}</ref>
[[Euston Square tube station]] on the [[Circle Line]], [[Hammersmith & City Line]] and [[Metropolitan Line]] is a short walk from the station along [[Euston Road]].


[[File:DISTRICT(1888) p136 - Euston Station (plan).jpg|thumb|Plan of Euston station from 1888]]
==See also==
The line between Euston and Camden was doubled between 1901 and 1906.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=44}} A new booking hall opened in 1914 on part of the cab yard. The Great Hall was redecorated and refurbished between 1915 and 1916 and again in 1927.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|pp=45–46}} The station's ownership was transferred to the [[London, Midland and Scottish Railway]] (LMS) in the [[Big Four (British railway companies)|1923 grouping]].{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=46}}


Apart from the lodges on Euston Road and statues now on the forecourt, few relics of the old station survive.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=56}} The [[National Railway Museum]]'s collection at York includes [[Edward Hodges Baily]]'s statue of [[George Stephenson]] from the Great Hall;<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nrm.org.uk/ourcollection/photo?group=Euston&objid=1997-7409_LMS_3039|archive-url=http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20130402224206/http://www.nrm.org.uk/ourcollection/photo?group%3DEuston%26objid%3D1997%2D7409_LMS_3039|url-status=dead|archive-date=2 April 2013|title=State of George Stephenson|publisher=National Railway Museum|access-date=10 July 2017}}</ref> the entrance gates;<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nrm.org.uk/ourcollection/buildingtherailway/CollectionItem?objid=1976-7035&pageNo=8&ipp=96|title=Euston Station gates|publisher=National Railway Museum|access-date=10 July 2017}}{{Dead link|date=September 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> and a [[Turntable (rail)|turntable]] from 1846 discovered during demolition.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nrm.org.uk/OurCollection/BuildingTheRailway/CollectionItem?objid=1996-7059&pageNo=260|title=Turntable, Cast Iron, London and Birmingham Railway|publisher=National Railway Museum|access-date=10 July 2017}}{{Dead link|date=September 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>
*[[Curzon Street Station]] - The Birmingham counterpart of the original Euston station.
<!--
<gallery>
File:Euston Station - The Great Hall.jpg|The Great Hall
File:Euston Station - 1851 - from Project Gutenberg - eText 13271.jpg|Euston Arch ({{circa|1851}})
File:LNWR War Memorial 2.jpg|[[London North Western Railway|LNWR]] War Memorial by [[Reginald Wynn Owen]]
File:LNWR lodge Euston right.jpg|LNWR Portland stone entrance lodge
File:British Railways in Wartime - Bridge of Goodbyes- Everyday Life at Euston Station, London, England, UK, 1944 D18904.jpg|Trains at Euston in 1944.
</gallery>
-->


===London, Midland and Scottish Railway redevelopment===
==Services==
By the 1930s Euston was again congested and the LMS considered rebuilding it. In 1931 it was reported that a site for a new station was being sought, the most likely option was behind the existing station in the direction of Camden Town.<ref>{{cite news |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=New Euston Station |url=http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000407/19310130/133/0014 |newspaper=Western Gazette |location=British Newspaper Archive |date=30 January 1931 |access-date=27 August 2016 |via = British Newspaper Archive |url-access=subscription }}</ref> The LMS announced in 1935 that the station (including the hotel and offices) would be rebuilt using a government loan guarantee.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=48}}
{{West Coast Main Line}}
{{rail start}}
{{rail line|next=[[Watford Junction railway station|Watford Junction]]|previous=Terminus|route=[[Virgin Trains]] <br><small> [[West Coast Main Line]]<br> Intercity services</small>|col=FF0000}}
{{rail line|next=[[Watford Junction railway station|Watford Junction]]|previous=Terminus|route=[[First ScotRail]] <br><small> [[West Coast Main Line]] and beyond<br> [[Caledonian Sleeper|Lowland Caledonian Sleeper]]</small>|col=ff80c0}}
{{rail line|next=[[Crewe railway station|Crewe]]|previous=Terminus|route=[[First ScotRail]] <br><small> [[West Coast Main Line]] and beyond<br> [[Caledonian Sleeper|Highland Caledonian Sleeper]]</small>|col=ff80c0}}
{{rail line|next=[[Harrow & Wealdstone station|Harrow &<br>Wealdstone]]|previous=Terminus|route=[[Silverlink]] <br><small>[[West Coast Main Line]] <br> London - Northampton commuter services</small>|col=012385}}
{{rail line|next=[[South Hampstead railway station|South<br>Hampstead]]|previous=Terminus|route=[[Silverlink|Silverlink Metro]] <br><small>[[Watford DC Line]]<br> London - Watford commuter services</small>|col=012385}}
{{end box}}


In 1937 it appointed the architect [[Percy Thomas]] to produce designs.<ref>{{cite news |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Reconstruction of Euston Station |url=http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001465/19370227/201/0008 |newspaper=Sheffield Independent |location=British Newspaper Archive |date=27 February 1937 |access-date=27 August 2016 |via = British Newspaper Archive |url-access=subscription }}</ref> He proposed an American-inspired station that would involve removing or resiting the arch, and included office frontages along Euston Road and a helicopter pad on the roof.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=48}}<ref name=bull>{{cite web |last=Bull |first=John |title=The Euston Arch Part 2: Death |url=http://www.londonreconnections.com/2009/the-euston-arch-part-2-death/ |publisher=London Reconnections |access-date=22 February 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130527162506/http://www.londonreconnections.com/2009/the-euston-arch-part-2-death/ |archive-date=27 May 2013 }}</ref> Redevelopment began on 12 July 1938, when {{convert|100000|LT||0|abbr=off|sp=}} of limestone was extracted for the building and new flats were constructed to rehouse people displaced by the works. The project was shelved indefinitely because of [[World War II]].{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=48}}
==External links==
{{commonscat|Euston station}}
*[http://www.networkrail.co.uk/aspx/819.aspx Station information] on {{PAGENAME}} from [[Network Rail]]
{{stn art lnk|EUS|NW12RZ}}
*[http://www.geocities.com/londondestruction/arch.html Euston Arch (London Destruction)]
*[http://www.motco.com/map/81006/SeriesSearchPlatesFulla.asp?mode=query&artist=390&other=498&x=11&y=11 1862 map, showing position of 1849 station]
*http://www.shaw-hardwick.co.uk - Website in memory of the Hardwicks.
*http://www.alwaystouchout.com/project/125 - Euston to Euston Square subway link


The station was damaged several times during [[the Blitz]] in 1940. Part of the Great Hall's roof was destroyed, and a bomb landed between platforms 2 and 3, destroying offices and part of the hotel.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=48}}
{{UK Major Railway Stations}}


=== New station ===
[[Category:Camden]]
[[File:Euston Doric Arch demolition geograph-2991033-by-Ben-Brooksbank.jpg|thumb|left|The Euston Arch being demolished, February 1962]]
[[Category:Railway termini in London]]
[[Category:Zone 1]]
[[Category:Network Rail managed stations]]


Passengers considered Euston to be squalid and covered in soot and it was restored and redecorated in 1953, when an enquiry kiosk in the middle of the Great Hall was removed.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=50}}{{sfn|Minnis|2011|p=43}} Ticket machines were modernised. By this time the Arch was surrounded by property development and kiosks and in need of restoration.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=50}}
[[de:Euston (Bahnhof)]]

[[fr:Euston (métro de Londres)]]
British Railways announced that Euston would be rebuilt to accommodate the [[Railway electrification in Great Britain|electrification]] of the [[West Coast Main Line]] in 1959.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=50}} Because of the restricted layout of track and tunnels at the northern end, enlargement only could be accomplished by expanding southwards over the area occupied by the Great Hall and the Arch.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=50}}<ref name=NewEuston1968>[http://www.railwaysarchive.co.uk/documents/BRLM_Euston1968.pdf The New Euston Station 1968]. [[British Rail]] information booklet.</ref> Permission to demolish the Arch and Great Hall was sought from [[London County Council]] and it was granted on condition that the Arch would be restored and re-sited. BR estimated it would cost at least £190,000 (now £{{inflation|UK|190000|1953|fmt=c|r=-4}}) and was not viable.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=50}}
[[pl:Euston Station]]

The Arch's demolition, announced by the Minister of Transport, [[Ernest Marples]] in July 1961, drew objections from the [[Hugh FitzRoy, 11th Duke of Grafton|Earl of Euston]], the [[Michael Parsons, 6th Earl of Rosse|Earl of Rosse]] and [[John Betjeman]]. Experts did not believe the work would cost £190,000 and speculated it could be done more cheaply by foreign labour. On 16 October 1961, 75 architects and students staged a demonstration against its demolition inside the Great Hall and a week later [[Charles Wheeler (journalist)|Sir Charles Wheeler]] led a deputation to speak with the Prime Minister [[Harold Macmillan]]. Macmillan replied that as well as the cost, there was nowhere large enough to relocate the Arch in keeping with its surroundings.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=53}}

Demolition began on 6 November and was completed within four months.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=53}} The station was rebuilt by [[Taylor Woodrow Construction]] to a design by [[London Midland Region of British Railways|London Midland Region]] architects of British Railways, [[William Robert Headley]] and [[Ray Moorcroft]],<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.architectsjournal.co.uk/news/c20-society-fails-in-bid-to-list-euston-station/8662541.article |title=C20 Society fails in bid to list Euston station |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date=13 May 2014 |website=The Architects' Journal |publisher=The Twentieth Century Society |access-date=25 January 2017 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.networkrail.co.uk/who-we-are/our-history/iconic-infrastructure/the-history-of-london-euston-station/|title=The history of London Euston station|work=Network Rail|access-date=20 May 2021}}</ref> in consultation with [[Richard Seifert|Richard Seifert & Partners]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.c20society.org.uk/botm/euston-station-london/ |title=Building of the Month. November 2011 |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date=1 November 2011 |website=The Twentieth Century Society |access-date=25 January 2017 }}</ref> Redevelopment began in summer 1962 and progressed from east to west, the Great Hall was demolished and an {{convert|11000|sqft|m2|adj=on}} temporary building housed ticket offices and essential facilities.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=53}} Euston worked to 80% capacity during the works with at least 11 platforms in operation at any time.{{sfn|British Rail|1968|p=12}} Services were diverted elsewhere where practical and the station remained operational throughout the works.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=53}}

The first phase of construction involved building 18 platforms with two track bays to handle parcels above them, a signal and communications building and various staff offices. The parcel deck was reinforced using 5,500 tons of structural steelwork.{{sfn|British Rail|1968|p=12}} Signalling on the routes leading out of the station was reworked along with the electrification of the lines, including the British Rail [[Automatic Warning System]].{{sfn|British Rail|1968|p=15}} Fifteen platforms had been completed by 1966, and the electric service began on 3 January. An automated parcel depot above platforms 3 to 18 opened on 7 August 1966.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=54}} The station was opened by [[Elizabeth II|Queen Elizabeth II]] on 14 October 1968.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=55}}
[[File:Euston railway station - IMG 0793.JPG|thumb|Platforms]]

The station is a long, low structure, {{convert|200|ft}} wide and {{convert|150|ft}} deep under a {{convert|36|ft|adj=on}} high roof. It opened with integrated automatic ticket facilities and a range of shops; the first of its kind for any British station.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=55}} The plan to construct offices above the station whose rents would help fund the cost of the rebuilding was scrapped after a government White Paper was released in 1963 that restricted the rate of commercial office development in London.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=54}}

In 1966, a "[[racism in the United Kingdom|Whites only]]" recruitment policy for guards at the station was dropped after the case of [[Asquith Xavier]], a migrant from [[Dominica]], who had been refused promotion on those grounds, was raised in Parliament and taken up by the Secretary of State for Transport, [[Barbara Castle]].<ref name="BBC-54272188">{{cite web |title=Asquith Xavier: Plaque honours train guard who fought Whites-only policy |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-kent-54272188 |work=BBC News |access-date=24 September 2020 |date=24 September 2020}}</ref>

A second development phase by [[Richard Seifert]] & Partners began in 1979, adding {{convert|405000|sqft}} of office space along the station frontage in the form of three low-rise towers overlooking Melton Street and Eversholt Street.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=345}} The offices were occupied by [[British Rail]],{{sfn|Gourvish|Anson|2004|p=37}} then by Railtrack, and by Network Rail which has now vacated{{efn|Many staff transferred to a new complex in [[Milton Keynes]], see [[Quadrant:mk]]}} all but a small portion of one of the towers. The offices are in a functional style; the main facing material is polished dark stone, complemented by white tiles, exposed concrete and plain glazing.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.building.co.uk/the-notorious-work-of-richard-seifert/5027597.article|title=The notorious work of Richard Seifert|journal=Building Magazine|date=25 November 2011|access-date=12 July 2017}}</ref>

The station has a large concourse separate from the train shed. Originally, no seats were installed there to deter vagrants and crime, but were added after complaints from passengers.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=345}} Few remnants of the older station remain: two [[Portland stone]] entrance lodges, the [[London and North Western Railway War Memorial]] and a statue of [[Robert Stephenson]] by [[Carlo Marochetti]], from the old ticket hall, stands in the forecourt.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=56}}

A large statue by [[Eduardo Paolozzi]] named ''[[Piscator (Paolozzi)|Piscator]]'' dedicated to German theatre director [[Erwin Piscator]] is sited at the front of the courtyard, which as of 2016 was reported to be deteriorating.<ref>{{cite news |last=Alberge |first=Dalya |date=28 November 2016 |title=Major Paolozzi sculpture facing decay 'because no one wants to own it' |url=https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2016/nov/28/paolozzi-sculpture-london-euston-facing-decay-because-no-one-wants-to-own-it |newspaper=The Guardian |access-date=25 January 2017 }}</ref> Other pieces of public art, including low stone benches by [[Paul de Monchaux]] around the courtyard, were commissioned by Network Rail in 1990.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.pauldemonchaux.co.uk/docs/project7.html |title=Portland Bench 1990 |last=De Monchaux |first=Paul |website=Paul de Monchaux Sculpture |publisher=Paul de Monchaux |access-date=25 January 2017 }}</ref> The station has catering units and shops, a large ticket hall and an enclosed car park with over 200 spaces.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/stations/eus/details.html#Transport_Links |title= Station Facilities for London Euston |publisher=ATOC |date=n.d. |access-date=26 March 2013}}</ref> The lack of daylight on the platforms compares unfavourably with the glazed trainshed roofs of traditional Victorian railway stations, but the use of the space above as a parcels depot released the maximum space at ground level for platforms and passenger facilities.{{sfn|British Rail|1968|p=13}}

Since 1996, proposals have been formulated to reconstruct the Arch as part of the redevelopment of the station,<ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.thecnj.com/camden/2009/050709/news050709_07.html |title= Arrival of Euston station arch delayed..._until 2012 |newspaper=Camden New Journal |location=London |date=7 May 2009 |access-date=20 September 2012 |first=Paul |last=Keilthy}}</ref> and its use as the terminus of the [[High Speed 2]] line.<ref name=CMgr>{{cite news |title=Crewe and Camden could benefit from HS2 rethink |url=http://www.construction-manager.co.uk/news/euston-and-crewe-could-benefit-hs2-rethink/ |work=Construction Manager |date=18 March 2014 |access-date=18 March 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140318154449/http://www.construction-manager.co.uk/news/euston-and-crewe-could-benefit-hs2-rethink/ |archive-date=18 March 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
<!--
<gallery>
File:Euston station MMB 21.jpg|Euston station and associated offices
File:Euston station signage.jpg|Station signage
File:Euston Station from above - 06.JPG|The trainshed from above
</gallery>
-->

=== Privatisation ===
Ownership of the station transferred from [[British Rail]] to [[Railtrack]] in 1994, passing to Network Rail in 2002 following the collapse of Railtrack.<ref name=nr/> In 2005 Network Rail was reported to have long-term aspirations to redevelop the station, removing the 1960s buildings and providing more commercial space by using the "[[air rights]]" above the platforms.{{sfn|Carmona|Wunderlich|2013|p=146}}

In 2007, [[British Land]] announced that it had won the tender to demolish and rebuild the station, spending some £250&nbsp;million of its overall redevelopment budget of £1&nbsp;billion for the area. The number of platforms would increase from 18 to 21.<ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.building.co.uk/news/british-land-wins-%C2%A31bn-euston-contract/3084568.article |work=Building |date=5 April 2007 |last=Stewart |first= Dan |title=British Land wins £1bn Euston contract}}</ref> In 2008, it was reported that the Arch could be rebuilt.<ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/court_and_social/article3385860.ece |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20081007183513/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/court_and_social/article3385860.ece |url-status= dead |archive-date= 7 October 2008 |newspaper=The Times |location=London |first= Marcus |last= Binney |title=Landmark of the railway age may be resurrected |date= 18 February 2008}}{{subscription required}}</ref> In September 2011, the demolition plans were cancelled, and [[Aedas]] was appointed to give the station a makeover.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.aedas.com/Euston-Station |title= Euston Station |publisher= Aedas |access-date= 26 March 2013 |archive-date= 18 February 2012 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120218231421/http://www.aedas.com/Euston-Station |url-status= dead }}</ref>

In July 2014 a statue of navigator and cartographer [[Matthew Flinders]], who circumnavigated the globe and charted Australia, was unveiled at Euston; his grave was rumoured to lie under platform 15 at the station,<ref>{{cite news |url= https://www.theguardian.com/science/the-h-word/2014/jul/18/matthew-flinders-bicentenary-statue-navigator-science-history |title=Matthew Flinders bicentenary: statue unveiled to the most famous navigator you've probably never heard of |work=The Guardian Science blog |author= Higgitt, Rebekah |location= London |date=18 July 2014 |access-date=25 August 2014}}</ref> but had been relocated during the original station construction and in 2019 was found behind the station during excavation work for the HS2 line.<ref name="UKG"/><ref>{{cite news |first=Meagan |last=Flynn |url=https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/The-explorer-who-literally-put-Australia-on-the-13561233.php |title=The explorer who literally put Australia on the map is found buried beneath a London train station |newspaper=The Washington Post |via=San Francisco Chronicle |date=25 January 2019 }}</ref>

=== High Speed 2 ===
[[File:Euston High Speed 2.png|right|thumbnail|Map of the area around Euston, with planned [[High Speed 2]] redevelopment. The new line is drawn in orange (left). (The line to the right is [[High Speed 1]] entering [[St Pancras International]]).]]
In March 2010 the [[Secretary of State for Transport]], [[Andrew Adonis]] announced that Euston was the preferred southern terminus of the planned [[High Speed 2]] line, which would connect to a newly built station near Curzon Street and Fazeley Street in Birmingham.<ref>{{cite book |url=http://www.dft.gov.uk/pgr/rail/pi/highspeedrail/commandpaper/pdf/cmdpaper.pdf |archive-url=http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20100513152957/http:/www.dft.gov.uk/pgr/rail/pi/highspeedrail/commandpaper/pdf/cmdpaper.pdf |url-status= dead |archive-date=13 May 2010 |title=High Speed Rail&nbsp;– Command Paper |author=Department for Transport |publisher= [[The Stationery Office]] |isbn=978-0-10-178272-2 |year=2010a |access-date=13 March 2010}}</ref> This would require expansion to the south and west to create new sufficiently long platforms. These plans involved a complete reconstruction, involving the demolition of 220 [[London Borough of Camden|Camden Council]] flats, with half the station providing conventional train services and the new half high-speed trains. The Command Paper suggested rebuilding the Arch, and included an artist's impression.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dft.gov.uk/pgr/rail/pi/highspeedrail/commandpaper/pdf/cmdpaper.pdf |archive-url=http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20100513152957/http:/www.dft.gov.uk/pgr/rail/pi/highspeedrail/commandpaper/pdf/cmdpaper.pdf |url-status= dead |archive-date=13 May 2010 |page=104 |publisher=Department for Transport |title=High Speed Rail (Command Paper) |date=March 2010}}</ref>

The station is to have seven new platforms dropped from an original planned eight, taking the total to 23, with 10 dedicated to HS2 services and 13 to conventional lines at a low level.<ref>{{Cite magazine |last=Hopkirk |first=Elizabeth |date=29 April 2021 |title=Next phase of HS2 will create 'considerable opportunities' for small practices, says design director |url= https://www.bdonline.co.uk/news/next-phase-of-hs2-will-create-considerable-opportunities-for-small-practices-says-design-director/5111593.article |access-date=3 May 2021 |magazine= Building Design |location= London}}</ref> The flats demolished for the extension would be replaced by significant building work above. The Underground station would be rebuilt and connected to adjacent Euston Square station. As part of the extension beyond Birmingham, the Mayor of London's office believed it will be necessary to build the proposed [[Crossrail 2]] line via Euston to relieve 10,000 extra passengers forecast to arrive during an average day.<ref>{{cite news |url= https://www.standard.co.uk/news/highspeed-trains-will-increase-passenger-numbers-by-10000-at-euston-station-6571867.html |title= High-speed trains 'will increase passenger numbers by 10,000' at Euston station |work=London Evening Standard |date=28 February 2011 |author=Cecil, Nicholas}}</ref><ref name="TSC 280611">{{cite web |url=http://www.parliamentlive.tv/Main/Player.aspx?meetingId=8725&st=12:05:36 |title=Transport Select Committee |publisher=HM Government |date=28 June 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.london.gov.uk/moderngov/mgConvert2PDF.aspx?ID=3644 |title=Subject: Proposal for Examining the Potential Effect of High Speed 2 on London's Transport Network |publisher=Greater London Authority |date=17 May 2011}}</ref><ref name="DTF CONS">{{cite web |url=https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/14597/hs2-governments-decisions.pdf |title=High Speed Rail: Investing in Britain's Future Consultation |publisher=Department for Transport |date=February 2011}}</ref>

To relieve pressure on Euston during and after rebuilding for High Speed 2, HS2 Ltd has proposed the diversion of some services to {{rws|Old Oak Common}} (for [[Crossrail]]). This would include eight commuter trains per hour originating/terminating between {{rws|Tring}} and {{rws|Milton Keynes Central}} inclusive.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.dft.gov.uk/pgr/rail/pi/highspeedrail/hs2ltd/hs2report/pdf/chapter3.pdf |title=High Speed Rail London to the West Midlands and Beyond: A Report to Government by High Speed Two Limited: part 3 of 11 |publisher=High Speed Two Limited |year=2010 |access-date=14 July 2017 |url-status=dead |archive-url=http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20100409201318/http://www.dft.gov.uk/pgr/rail/pi/highspeedrail/hs2ltd/hs2report/pdf/chapter3.pdf |archive-date=9 April 2010}}</ref> In 2016, the Mayor [[Sadiq Khan]] endorsed the plans and suggested that all services should terminate at Old Oak Common while a more appropriate solution is found for Euston.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/mayor-sadiq-khan-says-hs2-must-find-solution-to-euston-station-plans-a3361466.html |title=Mayor Sadiq Khan: HS2 'must find solution' to Euston station plans |first=Pippa |last=Crerar |newspaper=London Evening Standard |date=5 October 2016 |access-date=14 July 2017}}</ref>

The current scheme does not provide any direct access between High Speed 2 at Euston and the existing [[High Speed 1]] at St Pancras. In 2015, plans were announced to link the two stations via a [[travelator]] service.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/hs2-plans-revived-to-connect-london-terminus-of-high-speed-two-with-channel-tunnel-rail-link-10382994.html |title=HS2: Plans revived to connect London terminus of High Speed Two with Channel Tunnel Rail Link |first=Mark |last=Lefty |newspaper=The Independent |date=11 July 2015 |access-date=14 July 2017}}</ref> Platforms 17 and 18 closed in May and June 2019 for High Speed 2 preparation work.<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Euston Platforms 17 and 18 to be decommissioned |magazine=[[Today's Railways UK]] |number=262 |date=October 2018 |page=9}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine |title = Euston Platform 17b to close on 19 May |magazine = Today's Railways UK |issue = 209 |date = May 2019 |page = 20}}</ref>

The [[Euston Downside Carriage Maintenance Depot]] was demolished in 2018 in preparation for the start of tunnelling.<ref>{{cite news |title=First look at HS2's Euston tunnel portal site |url=https://www.gov.uk/government/news/first-look-at-hs2s-euston-tunnel-portal-site |access-date=6 October 2018 |work=GOV.UK |publisher=High Speed Two (HS2) Limited |date=4 October 2018}}</ref> The two office towers in front of the station were demolished between January 2019 and December 2020.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Dunton |first1=Jim |title=NEWS Demolition set to start on Seifert's Euston towers |url=https://www.bdonline.co.uk/news/demolition-set-to-start-on-seiferts-euston-towers/5097353.article |work=Building Design |access-date=10 September 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite news| first= Jordan |last= Marshall | date= 4 December 2020 | access-date= 23 December 2020 | title = Watch: HS2's demolition of Seifert's Euston towers |work=Building Design | url= https://www.bdonline.co.uk/news/watch-hs2s-demolition-of-seiferts-euston-towers/5109382.article}}</ref> The third tower at 1 Eversholt Street is not part of these plans. Two hotels on Cardington Street adjacent to the west of the station were also demolished.<ref>{{cite web |title=Two major demolition projects at Euston pave way for HS2 platforms |url=http://www.infrastructure-intelligence.com/article/apr-2019/two-major-demolition-projects-euston-pave-way-hs2-platforms |website=Infrastructure Intelligence |access-date=10 September 2020}}</ref> The [[cemetery]] in adjacent St James's Gardens was also controversially excavated in 2018-19, resulting in an estimated 60,000 graves having to be exhumed, and the entire site being cleared of all human remains{{snd}} the largest exhumation in British history,<ref>{{cite web |last1=Bolton |first1=Tom |title=Euston’s lost burial ground |url=https://wellcomecollection.org/stories/euston-s-lost-burial-ground |website=Wellcome Collection |publisher=The Wellcome Trust |access-date=3 December 2024}}</ref> and the corpses having to be reburied in [[Brookwood Cemetery]] in [[Brookwood]], [[Surrey]].<ref>{{cite web |title=London’s deceased from Euston’s St James’s Gardens to be reburied at Brookwood Cemetery |url=https://www.woking.gov.uk/news/london%E2%80%99s-deceased-euston%E2%80%99s-st-james%E2%80%99s-gardens-be-reburied-brookwood-cemetery |website=Woking Borough Council |publisher=Woking Borough Council |access-date=3 December 2024}}</ref>

In August 2019, the [[Department for Transport]] (DfT) ordered an independent review of the project, chaired by the British [[civil engineer]] [[Douglas Oakervee]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.gov.uk/government/news/government-announces-independent-review-into-hs2-programme|title=Government announces independent review into HS2 programme|date=21 August 2019|website=GOV.UK|publisher=Department for Transport|language=en|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190821150953/https://www.gov.uk/government/news/government-announces-independent-review-into-hs2-programme|archive-date=21 August 2019|access-date=21 August 2019}}</ref> The [[High Speed Two#Oakervee Review|Oakervee Review]] was published by the Department for Transport the following February, alongside a statement from the [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister]] [[Boris Johnson]] confirming that HS2 would go ahead in full, with reservations.<ref name="Oakervee-Review">{{cite web |title=Oakervee Review |url=https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/oakervee-review-of-hs2 |website=Department for Transport |access-date=12 February 2020 |quote=original rationale for HS2 – still holds: there is a need for greater capacity (both more trains on tracks and more seats on trains and reliability on the GB rail network) |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200219205147/https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/oakervee-review-of-hs2 |archive-date=19 February 2020 |url-status=live }}</ref> The review said the rebuild was "not satisfactory" and called the management "muddled" and recommended a change of governance.<ref name=AJ91020>{{cite news| title = More than £100m spent on Euston HS2 design fees and counting… | date= 9 October 2020 |first= Greg | last= Pitcher | work = Architects' Journal}}</ref> In Summer 2020, the government asked Network Rail's chairman, Sir [[Peter Hendy]], to lead an oversight board; in October 2020, the [[Architects' Journal]] reported that more than £100m had already been spent on engineering and architectural design fees.<ref name=AJ91020 />

In October 2023, the Prime Minister [[Rishi Sunak]] announced that construction of the Euston terminus and approach tunnel would not be government funded and that it could only go ahead with private sector investment.<ref name="BBC 5/10/23">{{cite news |title=HS2 will not go to Euston without private funds |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-67021225 |first1=Michael |last1=Race |first2=Katy |last2=Austin |work=BBC News |date=5 October 2023}}</ref> [[Transport for London]] commissioner [[Andy Lord]] was sceptical that the private sector would pay for the link to Old Oak Common.<ref>{{cite news |title='We are vital to London and the country': TfL boss Andy Lord on Ulez, rail funding and HS2 |first=Gwyn |last=Topham | work=The Guardian | date=22 October 2023 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/oct/22/we-are-vital-to-london-and-the-country-tfl-boss-andy-lord-on-ulez-rail-funding-and-hs2}}</ref>

== Criticism ==
===Demolition of original station===
The demolition of the original buildings in 1962 was described by the [[Royal Institute of British Architects]] as "one of the greatest acts of Post-War architectural vandalism in Britain"<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.architecture.com/HowWeBuiltBritain/HistoricalPeriods/Victorian/RailwayArchitecture/DesignForGreatHallEustonStation.aspx |title=Great Hall, Euston Station |authorlink=Royal Institute of British Architects |publisher=Royal Institute of British Architects |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131219210851/http://www.architecture.com/HowWeBuiltBritain/HistoricalPeriods/Victorian/RailwayArchitecture/DesignForGreatHallEustonStation.aspx#.UwvPxIWKZTx |archive-date=19 December 2013 |access-date=22 May 2021 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= https://pastinthepresent.net/2014/03/02/developers-must-get-right-the-re-design-of-euston-station/ |title=Euston's pioneering inter-city history |publisher=Past in the Present |date=2 March 2014 }}</ref> and was approved directly by [[Harold Macmillan]].<ref>{{cite news |url= https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2010/mar/15/euston-arch-railway-architecture |title=Raise the Euston Arch – and get railway architecture back on track |newspaper=The Guardian |location= London |first=Jonathan |last=Glancey |date=15 March 2010 |access-date=20 May 2021}}</ref> The attempts made to preserve the earlier building, championed by Sir [[John Betjeman]], led to the formation of the [[Victorian Society]] and heralded the modern conservation movement.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.architecture.com/HowWeBuiltBritain/HistoricalPeriods/Victorian/RailwayArchitecture/DesignForGreatHallEustonStation.aspx |title="How We Built Britain" exhibition |publisher=Royal Institution of British Architects |access-date=9 September 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131219210851/http://www.architecture.com/HowWeBuiltBritain/HistoricalPeriods/Victorian/RailwayArchitecture/DesignForGreatHallEustonStation.aspx |archive-date=19 December 2013}}</ref> This movement saved the nearby high Gothic [[St Pancras railway station|St Pancras station]] when threatened with demolition in 1966,{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=73}} ultimately leading to its renovation in 2007 as the terminus of HS1 to the Continent.<ref>{{cite press release |url= http://www.railhub2.co.uk/rh7/archive/arc_article.php?doc=2007-11-14%20EUR-001 |title=Eurostar opens for business at St Pancras International station |publisher=Eurostar |date=14 November 2007 |access-date=14 July 2017}}</ref>

===Architecture===
[[File:Euston Station from above - 01.JPG|thumb|Euston station seen from above, in 2013]]
Euston's 1960s style of architecture has been described as "a dingy, grey, horizontal nothingness"<ref>{{cite news |first=Andrew |last=Martin |author-link=Andrew Martin (novelist) |title=So, what would you burn? |date=13 December 2004 |url= http://www.newstatesman.com/node/161150 |work= New Statesman |location=London |access-date=22 September 2007}}</ref> and a reflection of "the tawdry glamour of its time", entirely lacking in "the sense of occasion, of adventure, that the great Victorian termini gave to the traveller".<ref>{{cite news |first=Gavin |last=Stamp |author-link=Gavin Stamp |title=Steam ahead: the proposed rebuilding of London's Euston station is an opportunity to atone for a great architectural crime |date=October 2007 |url= http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Steam+ahead%3A+the+proposed+rebuilding+of+London's+Euston+station+is+an...-a0169961673 |work= Apollo: the international magazine of art and antiques |access-date=9 November 2007}}</ref> Writing in ''[[The Times]]'', [[Richard Morrison (music critic)|Richard Morrison]] stated that "even by the bleak standards of Sixties architecture, Euston is one of the nastiest concrete boxes in London: devoid of any decorative merit; seemingly concocted to induce maximum angst among passengers; and a blight on surrounding streets. The design should never have left the drawing-board&nbsp;– if, indeed, it was ever on a drawing-board. It gives the impression of having been scribbled on the back of a soiled paper bag by a thuggish android with a grudge against humanity and a vampiric loathing of sunlight".<ref>{{cite news |first=Richard |last=Morrison |author-link=Richard Morrison (music critic) |title=Euston: we have an architectural problem |date=10 April 2007 |url= https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/euston-we-have-an-architectural-problem-bxxbvx5gwv0 |work =[[The Times]] |location=London |access-date=22 September 2007}} {{subscription required}}</ref>

===Passenger experience===
[[Michael Palin]], explorer and travel writer, in his contribution to ''[[Great Railway Journeys]]'' titled "Confessions of a Trainspotter" in 1980, likened it to "a great bath, full of smooth, slippery surfaces where people can be sloshed about efficiently".<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://londonist.com/2016/04/an-ode-to-euston-station |title=An Ode To Euston Station |date=12 April 2016 |website=Londonist}}</ref> Journalist [[Barney Ronay]] described the station as "easily, easily the worst main station in Western Europe" and that using it is "like being taken away to be machine gunned in the woods by various mobile phone and soft drinks companies".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.railnews.co.uk/news/2024/10/03-orrs-euston-decision-incredible-says.html |title=ORR’s Euston decision ‘incredible’, says watchdog |publisher=[[Railnews]] |date=2024-10-03 }}</ref>

Access to parts of the station is difficult for people with [[physical disability]]. The introduction of lifts in 2010 made the taxi rank and underground station accessible from the concourse, though some customers found them unreliable and frequently broken down.<ref>{{cite report |url=https://www.london.gov.uk/sites/default/files/gla_migrate_files_destination/Individual%20responses.pdf |title=Accessibility on the Transport Network |publisher=Greater London Authority |page=13 |access-date=13 July 2017}}</ref> [[Wayfindr]] technology was introduced to the station in 2015 to help people with [[visual impairment]] to navigate the station.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/public-leaders-network/2017/jun/06/transport-failing-disabled-people-new-technology-help |title=Existing transport is failing disabled people, but new tech may help |first=Cathy |last=Holloway |newspaper=The Guardian |date=6 June 2017 |access-date=13 July 2017}}</ref>

In September 2023, the [[Office of Rail and Road]] issued Network Rail with an improvement notice in relation to its failure to put in place effective measures to tackle overcrowding.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.orr.gov.uk/search-news/rail-regulator-requires-crowd-management-improvements-euston-station |title=Rail regulator requires crowd management improvements at Euston Station |publisher=[[Office of Rail and Road]] |date=2023-10-18 }}</ref> Network Rail admitted that the station was designed for a different era and that "the passenger experience at Euston remains uncomfortable at times".<ref>{{cite news |last=Simpson |first=Jack |url=https://www.railwaygazette.com/uk/euston-still-has-a-problem/67543.article |title=Euston still has a problem |work=[[Railway Gazette International]] |date=2024-10-04 }}</ref> The Office of Rail and Road declared in December 2023 that Network Rail had complied with the notice and implemented measures to better manage passenger traffic flows and overcrowding.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://committees.parliament.uk/publications/44894/documents/222814/default/ |title=Euston station improvement notice |publisher=[[Transport Select Committee]] |date=2024-05-08 }}</ref> In October 2024, [[London TravelWatch]] warned that passengers at Euston are being put in danger when the station becomes severely overcrowded during periods of disruption to services.<ref>{{cite news |last=Simpson |first=Jack |url=https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/oct/02/overcrowding-at-london-euston-station-puts-passengers-in-danger |title=Overcrowding at London’s Euston station ‘puts passengers in danger’ |work=[[The Guardian]] |date=2024-10-02 }}</ref> Transport Secretary [[Louise Haigh]] subsequently asked Network Rail to declutter the station concourse and improve how it handles train announcements.<ref>{{cite news |last=Lydall |first=Ross |url=https://www.standard.co.uk/news/transport/london-euston-station-departure-boards-network-rail-concourse-louise-haigh-b1185923.html |title=Euston station's giant advertising board switched off in five-point plan to tackle overcrowding |work=[[Evening Standard]] |date=2024-10-04 }}</ref> Network Rail reacted by switching off the advertising board installed in January 2024 after removal of the main departure boards, and issued a five point improvement plan.<ref>{{cite news |last=Topham |first=Gwyn |url=https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/oct/04/euston-station-advertising-screens-network-rail |title=Euston station’s big advertising screens turned off after overcrowding fears |work=[[The Guardian]] |date=2024-10-04 }}</ref>

==Incidents==
<!--railway related-->
On 26 April 1924, an [[electric multiple unit]] collided with the rear of an excursion train carrying passengers from the [[1924 FA Cup Final|FA Cup Final]] in [[Coventry]].{{sfn|Hall|1990|p=93}} Five passengers were killed. The crash was blamed on poor visibility owing to smoke and steam under the Park Street Bridge.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=57}}

On 27 August 1928, a passenger train collided with the [[buffer stops]]. Thirty people were injured.{{sfn|Trevena|1980|p=35}}

On 10 November 1938, a suburban service collided with empty coaches after a signal was misinterpreted. 23 people were injured.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=57}}

On 6 August 1949, an empty train was accidentally routed towards a service for Manchester, colliding with it at about {{cvt|5|mph|0}}. The crash was blamed on a lack of [[track circuit]]ing and no proper indication of when platforms were occupied.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=57}}

=== 1973 IRA attack ===

Extensive but superficial damage was caused by an [[Provisional Irish Republican Army|IRA]] bomb that exploded close to a snack bar at approximately 1:10&nbsp;pm on 10 September 1973, injuring eight people.<ref name=ira>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/september/10/newsid_2504000/2504619.stm |title=On This Day 1973: "Bomb blasts rock Central London" |work=BBC News |access-date=27 February 2007}}</ref> A similar explosive had detonated 50 minutes earlier at King's Cross.{{sfn|Jones|2016|p=411}} The [[Metropolitan Police]] had received a three-minute warning,<ref name=ira/> and were unable to evacuate the station completely, but British Transport Police managed to clear much of the area just before the explosion.{{sfn|Jones|2016|p=348}} In 1974, the mentally ill [[Judith Ward]] confessed to the bombing and was convicted of this and other crimes, despite the evidence against her being highly suspect and Ward retracting her confessions. She was acquitted in 1992; the true culprit has yet to be identified.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/november/4/newsid_2538000/2538321.stm |title=On this Day 1974: M62 bomber jailed for life |work=BBC News |date=4 November 1974 |access-date=13 July 2017}}</ref>

==Cultural references==
The station has been the backdrop for a musical film clip as well as the subject in songs since the 1960s. [[Barbara Ruskin]] both wrote and recorded the song "Euston Station" which was released in 1967.<ref>{{cite magazine |magazine=Rail |issue=April 7 - April 20, 2021 |page= https://archive.org/details/rail-04.7.2021/mode/2up? Page 64 |title=Euston station: a muse for musicians, <small>JONATHAN KEEN explores Euston’s connection with music from its past, to the present and the future</small>, THE PAST|first=Jonathan |last=Keen}}</ref><ref>Catalog of Copyright Entries: ''Third Series'' Volume 21, Part 5, Number 1, Section I<br> Music Current and Renewal Registrations January-June 1967 - [https://www.google.com/books/edition/Catalog_of_Copyright_Entries/SDwhAQAAIAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=%22Barbara+Ruskin%22Euston+Station%22&pg=PA167 Page 167 EUSTON STATION: w & m Barbara Ruskin]</ref> In 1969, rock group [[Ambrose Slade]] shot a promo film at the station for their ''[[Beginnings (Ambrose Slade album)|Beginnings]]'' album. [[Craig Davies (musician)|Craig Davies]] recorded the song "Euston Railway Station Blues" which was released in the late 1980s. [[Jane Kitto|Jane Kitto's]] 2002 song "Busdriver" is about getting on the no. 73 bus from Euston station to Stoke Newington. In another travel theme it was referenced by [[The Smiths]] in their song "London" as a way to get to the city from Manchester.<ref>''Rail'', April 7 - April 20, 2021 - [https://archive.org/details/rail-04.7.2021/mode/2up? Page 64 Euston station: a muse for musicians, <small>JONATHAN KEEN explores Euston’s connection with music from its past, to the present and the future</small>, THE PAST]</ref>

==National Rail services==
Euston has services from four different train operators:

[[File:390046 and 92023 London Euston to Inverness, Fort William and Aberdeen 1S25.jpg|thumb|right|[[Virgin Trains]] {{brc|390}} (left) and [[Caledonian Sleeper]] {{brc|92}} (right)]]
[[File:Euston station MMB 45 378229.jpg|thumb|right|[[London Overground]] {{brc|378}} entering Euston on the [[Lioness line]] from {{Stnlnk|Watford Junction}}]]
[[File:Hugh llewelyn 350 248 (6472673671).jpg|thumb|right|[[London Midland]] {{brc|350}} entering Euston from the [[West Coast Main Line]]]]

'''[[Avanti West Coast]]''' operates InterCity West Coast services:<ref name="Avanti">{{cite web|url=https://www.avantiwestcoast.co.uk/-/media/avanti-timetables/10-dec-2023-1-jun-2024-timetable-book.pdf|title=Scheduled timetable book for 10 December 2023 to 1 June 2024|publisher=Avanti West Coast|location=[[London]]}}</ref>
*2 tph (trains per hour) to {{rws|Birmingham New Street}} via {{rws|Coventry}}, extended to/from {{stn|Wolverhampton}} (at peak hours), of which:
**1 tph extends to {{rws|Preston}} via {{rws|Warrington Bank Quay}} and {{rws|Wigan North Western}}
***2 trains per day (tpd) run further to {{rws|Blackpool North}} only, with 1 train every 2 hours running to {{rws|Edinburgh Waverley||Edinburgh}} and 4 tpd running to {{rws|Glasgow Central}}. Services to Scotland run via {{rws|Carlisle}}.
*1 tph to {{Stnlnk|Chester}} via {{rws|Crewe}}, with certain trains extended along the [[North Wales Main Line]] to {{rws|Bangor|Wales}} or {{Stnlnk|Holyhead}} for the ferries to Ireland, such as [[Irish Ferries]] as well as [[Stena Line]] to [[Dublin Port]], one train on Mon-Fri to {{Stnlnk|Wrexham General}}<ref>{{cite web|url=https://online.adaresec.com/pt/virgin/VTMay17C/|title=London and the West Midlands – North Wales|publisher=Virgin Trains|access-date=14 July 2017}}</ref>
*3 tph to {{stn|Manchester Piccadilly}} via {{rws|Stockport}}, of which:
**2 tph operate via {{rws|Stoke-on-Trent}}
**1 tph operate via {{rws|Stafford}}, {{rws|Crewe}} and {{rws|Wilmslow}}
*1 tph to {{Stnlnk|Liverpool Lime Street}} via Crewe and {{rws|Runcorn}}
*1 tph to {{Stnlnk|Glasgow Central}} via {{rws|Preston}}. Additional services operate to/from Preston, Lancaster and Carlisle during peak times.

'''[[West Midlands Trains|London Northwestern Railway]]''' operates regional and commuter services.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.londonnorthwesternrailway.co.uk/travel-information/timetables|title=Train timetables and schedules |publisher=London Northwestern Railway|location=London|access-date=14 June 2017|at=Select an individual timetable to verify the services}}</ref>
*2 tph to {{rws|Tring}} via {{rws|Watford Junction}}
*1 tph to {{rws|Milton Keynes Central}}
*2 tph to {{rws|Birmingham New Street}} via {{rws|Northampton}}
*1 tph to {{rws|Crewe}} via {{rws|Nuneaton}} and {{rws|Stafford}}

'''[[London Overground]]''' operates local commuter services.
*4 tph to {{Stnlnk|Watford Junction}} via the [[Lioness line]] ([[Watford DC line]])<ref>{{cite web|url=http://content.tfl.gov.uk/watford-junction-euston-timetable-may-2017.pdf|title=Watford Junction to Euston|publisher=Transport for London|access-date=14 July 2017|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170712171218/http://content.tfl.gov.uk/watford-junction-euston-timetable-may-2017.pdf|archive-date=12 July 2017}}</ref>

'''[[Caledonian Sleeper]]''' operates two nightly services to Scotland from Sunday to Friday inclusive.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.scotrail.co.uk/plan-your-journey/travel-connections/caledonian-sleeper|title=Caledonian Sleeper|publisher=ScotRail|access-date=14 July 2017}}</ref>
*Highland sleeper to {{Stnlnk|Aberdeen}} via {{Stnlnk|Kirkcaldy}} and {{Stnlnk|Dundee}}, {{Stnlnk|Fort William}} via {{Stnlnk|Dalmuir}}, {{Stnlnk|Fort William}} via {{stnlnk|Glasgow Queen Street}} and {{Stnlnk|Inverness}} via [[Stirling railway station, Scotland|Stirling]] and [[Perth railway station, Scotland|Perth]]
*Lowland sleeper to Glasgow Central and Edinburgh Waverley via {{Stnlnk|Carlisle}}

'''[[Great Western Railway (train operating company)|Great Western Railway]]''' will operate InterCity Greater Western services on occasional days from {{tooltip|2024–2030|Services started on the 17 November 2024.}}.<ref name="GWR">{{cite web|url=https://www.standard.co.uk/news/transport/gwr-paddington-trains-diverted-euston-elizabeth-line-hs2-christmas-b1180532.html|title=New HS2 station: Paddington trains diverted to Euston at Christmas until 2030 and Elizabeth line services disrupted|publisher=[[Evening Standard]]|location=[[London]]}}</ref>
*1 tph to {{stn|Plymouth}} via {{rws|Taunton}} and {{rws|Exeter St David's}}, of which:
**1 tp2h (trains per 2 hour) extends to {{rws|Penzance}} via {{rws|St Austell}} and {{rws|Truro}}
*1 tph to {{Stnlnk|Swansea}} via {{Stnlnk|Cardiff Central}}, of which:
**1 tpd extends to {{Stnlnk|Carmarthen}}

'''[[Night Riviera]]''' will operate a nightly service to [[Cornwall]] from Sunday to Friday inclusive, on occasional days from {{tooltip|2024-2030|Servies started on the 17 November 2024.}}.<ref name="GWR"/>
*sleeper to Penzance via Taunton, Plymouth and St Austell .

{{Adjacent stations|noclear=y
|system1=London Overground
|line1=Lioness|left1=South Hampstead
|system2=National Rail
|note-row2=
{{rail line|previous={{Stnlnk|Watford Junction}}
|route=[[Caledonian Sleeper]]<br /><small>[[Caledonian Sleeper|Lowland Caledonian Sleeper]]</small>
|col={{CS color}} }}
{{rail line
|previous={{Stnlnk|Crewe}}
|route=[[Caledonian Sleeper]]<br /><small>[[Caledonian Sleeper|Highland Caledonian Sleeper]]<br />(southbound)</small>
|col={{CS color}} }}
{{rail line
|next=''Terminus''
|route=[[Caledonian Sleeper]]<br /><small>[[Caledonian Sleeper|Highland Caledonian Sleeper]]<br />(northbound)</small>
|previous={{Stnlnk|Watford Junction}}
|col={{CS color}} }}
{{rail line|previous={{rws|Watford Junction}} or {{rws|Milton Keynes Central}}
|route=[[London Northwestern Railway]] <br /><small>London&nbsp;– Crewe via the [[Trent Valley line]]</small> |col={{LNW colour}} }}
{{rail line|previous=[[Harrow & Wealdstone station|Harrow & Wealdstone]] or [[Watford Junction railway station|Watford Junction]] or [[Leighton Buzzard railway station|Leighton Buzzard]]|route=[[London Northwestern Railway]] <br /><small>[[West Coast Main Line|London – Milton Keynes Central/Northampton/Birmingham]]</small> |col={{LNW colour}} }}
{{rail line|previous=[[Harrow & Wealdstone station|Harrow & Wealdstone]] or [[Wembley Central station|Wembley Central]] or [[Watford Junction railway station|Watford Junction]]|route=[[London Northwestern Railway]]<br /><small>[[West Coast Main Line|London Euston – Tring]]</small>|col={{LNW colour}} }}
{{rail line
|previous={{Stnlnk|Watford Junction}} or {{Stnlnk|Milton Keynes Central}} or {{Stnlnk|Coventry}} or {{Stnlnk|Rugby}}
|route=[[Avanti West Coast]]<br /><small> [[West Coast Main Line|WCML London – West Midlands – North West & Scotland]]</small>
|col={{AWC colour}} }}
{{rail line
|previous={{Stnlnk|Milton Keynes Central}} or {{Stnlnk|Nuneaton}}
|route=[[Avanti West Coast]]<br /><small> [[West Coast Main Line|WCML London – Chester & North Wales]]</small>
|col={{AWC colour}} }}
{{rail line
|previous={{Stnlnk|Watford Junction}} or {{Stnlnk|Milton Keynes Central}} or {{Stnlnk|Stafford}} or {{Stnlnk|Crewe}} or {{Stnlnk|Runcorn}}
|route=[[Avanti West Coast]]<br /><small> [[West Coast Main Line|WCML London – Crewe – Liverpool]]</small>
|col={{AWC colour}} }}
{{rail line
|previous={{Stnlnk|Watford Junction}} or {{Stnlnk|Milton Keynes Central}} or {{Stnlnk|Stafford}} or {{Stnlnk|Stoke-on-Trent}} or {{Stnlnk|Crewe}}
|route=[[Avanti West Coast]]<br /><small> [[West Coast Main Line|WCML London – Manchester via Stoke-on-Trent or Crewe]]</small>
|col={{AWC colour}} }}
{{rail line|previous={{Stnlnk|Watford Junction}} or {{Stnlnk|Milton Keynes Central}} or {{Stnlnk|Tamworth}} or {{Stnlnk|Warrington Bank Quay}} or {{Stnlnk|Preston}}|route=[[Avanti West Coast]]<br /><small>[[West Coast Main Line|WCML London – North West & Scotland]]</small>|col={{AWC colour}} }}
{{rail line|previous={{Stnlnk|Reading}} or {{Stnlnk|Newbury}} or {{Stnlnk|Swindon}}|route=[[Great Western Railway (train operating company)|Great Western Railway]] <br /><small>[[Great Western Main Line]]</small>|col={{FGW colour}} }}
{{rail line|previous={{Stnlnk|Reading}}|route=[[Great Western Railway (train operating company)|Great Western Railway]]<br /><small>[[Night Riviera]]</small>|col={{FGW colour}} }}
| header18 = Future services
| system19 = National Rail
| note-row19 =
{{rail line|previous=[[Old Oak Common railway station|Old Oak Common]]|route=[[Avanti West Coast]]<br /><small>[[High Speed 2]]</small>|col={{AWC colour}}}}
}}

== London Underground ==
{{Overground RDT}}
{{Main|Euston tube station|Euston Square tube station}}

Euston was poorly served by the early London Underground network. The nearest station on the [[Metropolitan line]] was Gower Street, around five minutes' walk away. A permanent connection did not appear until 12 May 1907, when the [[City & South London Railway]] opened an extension west from [[Angel tube station|Angel]]. The [[Charing Cross, Euston & Hampstead Railway]] opened an adjacent station on 22 June in the same year; these two stations are now part of the [[Northern line]]. Gower Street station was quickly renamed [[Euston Square tube station|Euston Square]] in response.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|pp=45–46}} A connection to the [[Victoria line]] opened on 1 December 1968.{{sfn|Jackson|1984|p=55}}

The underground network around Euston is planned to change depending on the construction of High Speed 2. [[Transport for London]] (TfL) plans to change the safeguarded route for the proposed [[Chelsea–Hackney line]] to include Euston between Tottenham Court Road and King's Cross St Pancras.<ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.transportxtra.com/magazines/local_transport_today/news/?ID=25199 |title= HS2 fuels Crossrail 2 business case |work=TransportXtra |date=21 December 2010}}</ref> As part of the rebuilding work for High Speed 2, it is proposed to integrate Euston and Euston Square into a single tube station.<ref name="TSC 280611"/>
{{Adjacent stations|noclear=y
|system1=London Underground
|header2=Euston
|line2=Northern|left2=Mornington Crescent|right2=Warren Street|type2=Charing Cross Branch|transfer2=Euston
|line3=Northern|left3=Camden Town|right3=King's Cross St Pancras|type3=Bank|transfer3=Euston
|line4=Victoria|left4=Warren Street|right4=King's Cross St Pancras|transfer4=Euston
|header5=Euston Square
|line6=Circle|left6=Great Portland Street|right6=King's Cross St Pancras|type6=section 1|transfer6=Euston Square
|line7=Hammersmith & City|left7=Great Portland Street|right7=King's Cross St Pancras|transfer7=Euston Square
|line8=Metropolitan|left8=Great Portland Street|right8=King's Cross St Pancras|to-right8=Aldgate|transfer8=Euston Square
}}

== See also ==
* [[Birmingham Curzon Street railway station (1838–1966)]] – the original Birmingham counterpart to the original Euston station
* [[Pennsylvania Station (1910–1963)]] – a similarly demolished and rebuilt station

== References ==
=== Notes ===
{{Notelist}}

=== Citations ===
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}

=== Sources ===
{{refbegin}}
* {{cite book|last1=Biddle|first1=Gordon|last2=Nock|first2=Oswald Stevens|title=The railway heritage of Britain: 150 years of railway architecture and engineering|publisher=M. Joseph|year=1983|isbn=978-0-718-12355-0}}
* {{cite book | last=Bussell | first=Michael | title=Structures & Construction in Historic Building Conservation | chapter=Use of Iron and Steel in Buildings | publisher=Blackwell Publishing Ltd | publication-place=Oxford, UK | date=2008-04-15 | pages=173–191 | isbn=978-0-470-69181-6 | doi=10.1002/9780470691816.ch10 | url=http://ndl.ethernet.edu.et/bitstream/123456789/67438/1/1590.pdf#page=185}}
* {{cite book|last1=Carmona|first1=Matthew|last2=Wunderlich|first2=Filipa Matos|title=Capital Spaces: The Multiple Complex Public Spaces of a Global City|publisher=Routledge|year=2013|isbn=978-1-136-31196-3}}
* {{cite book |last=Cole |first=Beverly |title=Trains |publisher=H.F.Ullmann |year=2011 |isbn=978-3-8480-0516-1 |location=Potsdam, Germany }}
* {{cite book|last1=Gourvish|first1=Terry|last2=Anson|first2=Mike|title=British Rail 1974–1997 : From Integration to Privatisation|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2004|isbn=978-0-19926-909-9}}
* {{cite book |last=Hall |first=Stanley |title=The Railway Detectives |year=1990 |publisher=Ian Allan |location=London |isbn=0-7110-1929-0 }}
* {{cite book |last=Jackson|first=Alan| year = 1984 |orig-year=1969 | title = London's Termini | publisher = David & Charles | isbn = 0-330-02747-6|location=London}}
* {{cite book| last=Jones|first=Ian|title=London: Bombed Blitzed and Blown Up: The British Capital Under Attack Since 1867|publisher=Frontline Books|year=2016|isbn=978-1-473-87899-0}}
* {{cite book |last1=McCarthy |first1=Colin |last2=McCarthy |first2=David |title = Railways of Britain – London North of the Thames |publisher = Ian Allan Publishing |location= Hersham, Surrey |isbn=978-0-7110-3346-7 |year=2009 }}
* {{cite book |last1=Minnis |first1=John |title=Britain's Lost Railways: A Commemoration of our finest railway architecture |date=2011 |publisher=Aurum |isbn=978-1-78131-773-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Xj9mDwAAQBAJ |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last=Pile|first=John|title=A History of Interior Design|publisher=Laurence King Publishing|year=2005|isbn=978-1-856-69418-6}}
* {{cite book |last=Trevena |first=Arthur |title=Trains in Trouble |volume= 1 |year=1980 |publisher=Atlantic Books |location=Redruth |isbn=0-906899-01-X }}
* {{cite report|url=http://www.eustonarch.org/britishrail1968.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090704140724/http://www.eustonarch.org/britishrail1968.pdf |archive-date=4 July 2009 |title=The New Euston Station|year=1968|publisher=British Rail|ref={{harvid|British Rail|1968}}}}
{{refend}}

== External links ==
{{Commons}}
* [https://www.networkrail.co.uk/stations/euston/ Station information] on Euston railway station from Network Rail
* [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=65189 Euston Station and railway works] – information about the old station from the ''[[Survey of London]]'' online.
* [http://www.casa.ucl.ac.uk/andy/qt/Euston.html Euston Station Panorama]
* [https://www.euston.com Euston London Guide]

{{Transport in London}}
{{London Overground navbox|Serving=y|Watford=y}}
{{Major railway stations in Britain|state=collapsed}}
{{London landmarks}}
{{Railway stations served by Avanti West Coast}}
{{Railway stations served by Caledonian Sleeper}}
{{Railway stations served by Great Western Railway}}
{{Railway stations served by West Midlands Trains}}

{{Authority control}}

[[Category:Railway stations in the London Borough of Camden]]
[[Category:DfT Category A stations]]
[[Category:Former London and Birmingham Railway stations]]
[[Category:Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1837]]
[[Category:Railway stations served by Avanti West Coast]]
[[Category:Railway stations served by Caledonian Sleeper]]
[[Category:Railway stations served by London Overground]]
[[Category:Railway stations served by West Midlands Trains]]
[[Category:Network Rail managed stations]]
[[Category:Railway termini in London]]
[[Category:Architectural controversies]]
[[Category:Richard Seifert buildings]]
[[Category:London station group]]
[[Category:Stations on the West Coast Main Line]]
[[Category:Lioness line stations]]

Latest revision as of 05:20, 9 December 2024

Euston National Rail London Overground
London Euston
Side on view of a station entrance with a statue
Station entrance in 2017, with the statue of Robert Stephenson
Euston is located in Central London
Euston
Euston
Location of Euston in Central London
LocationEuston Road
Local authorityLondon Borough of Camden
Managed byNetwork Rail
Station code(s)EUS
DfT categoryA
Number of platforms16
AccessibleYes[1]
Fare zone1
OSIEuston London Underground
Euston Square London Underground
St Pancras National Rail
King's Cross National Rail[2]
Cycle parkingYes – platforms 17–18 and external
Toilet facilitiesYes
National Rail annual entry and exit
2019–20Decrease 44.777 million[3]
– interchange Increase 4.357 million[3]
2020–21Decrease 6.607 million[3]
– interchange Decrease 0.843 million[3]
2021–22Increase 23.098 million[3]
– interchange Increase 3.121 million[3]
2022–23Increase 31.318 million[3]
– interchange Decrease 2.124 million[3]
2023–24Increase 36.185 million[3]
– interchange Increase 2.680 million[3]
Railway companies
Original companyLondon & Birmingham Railway
Pre-groupingLondon & North Western Railway
Post-groupingLondon Midland & Scottish Railway
Key dates
20 July 1837Opened
1849Expanded
1962–1968Rebuilt
Other information
External links
Coordinates51°31′42″N 0°07′59″W / 51.5284°N 0.1331°W / 51.5284; -0.1331
London transport portal

Euston railway station (/ˈjstən/ YOO-stən; or London Euston) is a major central London railway terminus managed by Network Rail in the London Borough of Camden. It is the southern terminus of the West Coast Main Line, the UK's busiest inter-city railway. Euston is the tenth-busiest station in Britain and the country's busiest inter-city passenger terminal, being the gateway from London to the West Midlands, North West England, North Wales and Scotland.

Intercity express passenger services to the major cities of Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool, Glasgow and Edinburgh, and through services to Holyhead for connecting ferries to Dublin are operated by Avanti West Coast. Overnight sleeper services to Scotland are provided by the Caledonian Sleeper. London Northwestern Railway provide commuter and regional services to the West Midlands, whilst the Lioness line of the London Overground provides local suburban services in the London area via the Watford DC Line which runs parallel to the West Coast Main Line as far as Watford Junction. Euston tube station is connected to the main concourse and Euston Square tube station is nearby. King's Cross and St Pancras railway stations are about 12 mile (800 metres) east along Euston Road.

Euston, the first inter-city railway terminal in London, was planned by George and Robert Stephenson. It was designed by Philip Hardwick and built by William Cubitt, with a distinctive arch over the station entrance. The station opened as the terminus of the London and Birmingham Railway (L&BR) on 20 July 1837. Euston was expanded after the L&BR was amalgamated with other companies to form the London and North Western Railway, and the original sheds were replaced by the Great Hall in 1849. Capacity was increased throughout the 19th century from two platforms to fifteen. The station was controversially rebuilt in the mid-1960s when the Arch and the Great Hall were demolished to accommodate the electrified West Coast Main Line, and the revamped station still attracts criticism over its architecture. Euston is to be the London terminus for the planned High Speed 2 railway and the station is being redeveloped to accommodate it.

Name and location

[edit]

The station is named after Euston Hall in Suffolk, the ancestral home of the Dukes of Grafton, the main landowners in the area during the mid-19th century.[4] It is set back from Euston Square and Euston Road on the London Inner Ring Road, between Cardington Street and Eversholt Street in the London Borough of Camden.[5] It is one of 20 stations managed by Network Rail.[6] As of the 2022-23 estimates of station usage, it is the tenth-busiest station in Britain[a][7] It is the eighth-busiest terminus in London by entries and exits.[8][9] Euston bus station is in front of the main entrance.[10]

History

[edit]

Euston was the first inter-city railway station in London. It opened on 20 July 1837 as the terminus of the London and Birmingham Railway (L&BR).[11] It was demolished in the 1960s and replaced with the present building in the international modern style.[12]

The site was chosen in 1831 by George and Robert Stephenson, engineers of the L&BR. The area was mostly farmland at the edge of the expanding city, and adjacent to the New Road (now Euston Road), which had caused urban development.[13][14] The name Euston came from Euston Hall, the seat of the duke of Grafton, who owned the locality.

The station and railway have been owned by the L&BR (1837–1846),[15] the London and North Western Railway (LNWR) (1846–1923), the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) (1923–1948),[16] British Railways (1948–1994), Railtrack (1994–2002)[17] and Network Rail (2002–present).[18]

Old station

[edit]
An early print of Euston showing the wrought iron roof of 1837

The plan was to construct a station near the Regent's Canal in Islington to provide a connection for London dock traffic. An alternative site at Marble Arch, proposed by Robert Stephenson, was rejected by a provisional committee, and a proposal to end the line at Maiden Lane was rejected by the House of Lords in 1832. A terminus at Camden Town, announced by Stephenson the following year, received royal assent on 6 May, before an extension was approved in 1834, allowing the line to reach Euston Grove where the original station was built by William Cubitt.[13][14]

Initial services were three trains to and from Boxmoor with journeys taking just over an hour. On 9 April 1838, they were extended to a temporary halt at Denbigh Hall near Bletchley where a coach service was provided to Rugby. The line to Curzon Street station in Birmingham opened on 17 September 1838, the journey of 112 miles (180 km) took around 5+14 hours.[19]

The incline from Camden Town to Euston involved crossing the Regent's Canal on a gradient of more than 1 in 68. Because steam trains at the time could not climb such an ascent, they were cable-hauled on the down line towards Camden until 1844, after which bank engines were used.[20] The L&BR's act of Parliament prohibited the use of locomotives in the Euston area, following concerns of residents about noise and smoke from locomotives toiling up the incline.[21]

"Euston Arch": the original entrance to Euston Station (photographed in 1896)

The station was built with space left vacant for extra platforms, as it was originally planned for the Great Western Railway (GWR) to use Euston, as the terminus of the Great Western Main Line. In the event, the GWR chose to build their own terminus at Paddington. The spare land was instead used for more platforms for ever expanding services as the railway network grew.[22]

The station building, designed by the classically trained architect Philip Hardwick,[23][24] had a 200-foot-long (61 m) trainshed by structural engineer Charles Fox. It had two 420-foot-long (130 m) platforms, one each for departures and arrival. The main entrance portico, the Euston Arch, also by Hardwick, symbolised the arrival of a major new transport system and was "the gateway to the north".[25] It was 72 feet (22 m) high, supported on four 44 ft 2 in (13.46 m) by 8 ft 6 in (2.59 m) hollow Doric propylaeum columns of Bramley Fall stone, the largest ever built.[26][27] It was completed in May 1838 and cost £35,000 (now £3,981,000).[25] The old station building was probably the first one in the world with all-wrought iron roof trusses.[28]

The first railway hotels in London were built at Euston. Two hotels designed by Hardwick opened in 1839 on either side of the Arch; the Victoria on the west had basic facilities while the Euston on the east was designed for first-class passengers.[29]

The Great Hall, Euston Station

Between 1838 and 1841, parcel handling grew from 2,700 parcels a month to 52,000.[15] By 1845, 140 staff were employed but trains began to run late because of a lack of capacity.[29] The following year, two platforms (later 9 and 10) were constructed on vacant land to the west of the station that had been reserved for Great Western Railway services.[30] The L&BR amalgamated with the Manchester & Birmingham Railway and the Grand Junction Railway in 1846 to form the LNWR. The company headquarters were established at Euston requiring a block of offices to be built between the Arch and the platforms.[15]

The station's facilities were expanded with the opening of the Great Hall on 27 May 1849 replacing the original sheds. The Great Hall was designed by Hardwick's son Philip Charles Hardwick in classical style. It was 125 ft (38 m) long, 61 ft (18.6 m) wide, and 62 ft (18.9 m) high with a coffered ceiling and a sweeping double flight of stairs leading to offices at its northern end.[30] Architectural sculptor John Thomas contributed eight allegorical statues representing the cities served by the line.[31] The station faced Drummond Street, further back from Euston Road than the front of the modern complex; Drummond Street now terminates at the side of the station but then ran across its front.[32] A short road, Euston Grove, ran from Euston Square towards the arch.[33]

A bay platform (later platform 7) for local services to Kensington (Addison Road) opened in 1863.[34] Two new platforms (1 and 2) were added in 1873 along with an entrance for cabs from Seymour Street. At the same time, the station roof was raised by 6 feet (1.8 m) to accommodate smoke from the engines.[35]

The continued growth of long-distance railway traffic led to major expansion along the station's west side starting in 1887. It involved rerouting Cardington Street over part of the burial ground (later St James's Gardens)[36] of St James's Church, Piccadilly,[37] which was located some way from the church.[38] To avoid public outcry, the remains were reinterred at St Pancras Cemetery.[35] Two more platforms (4 and 5) opened in 1891.[39] Four departure platforms (now platforms 12–15), bringing the total to 15, and a booking office on Drummond Street opened on 1 July 1892.[35][11]

Plan of Euston station from 1888

The line between Euston and Camden was doubled between 1901 and 1906.[40] A new booking hall opened in 1914 on part of the cab yard. The Great Hall was redecorated and refurbished between 1915 and 1916 and again in 1927.[41] The station's ownership was transferred to the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) in the 1923 grouping.[16]

Apart from the lodges on Euston Road and statues now on the forecourt, few relics of the old station survive.[42] The National Railway Museum's collection at York includes Edward Hodges Baily's statue of George Stephenson from the Great Hall;[43] the entrance gates;[44] and a turntable from 1846 discovered during demolition.[45]

London, Midland and Scottish Railway redevelopment

[edit]

By the 1930s Euston was again congested and the LMS considered rebuilding it. In 1931 it was reported that a site for a new station was being sought, the most likely option was behind the existing station in the direction of Camden Town.[46] The LMS announced in 1935 that the station (including the hotel and offices) would be rebuilt using a government loan guarantee.[47]

In 1937 it appointed the architect Percy Thomas to produce designs.[48] He proposed an American-inspired station that would involve removing or resiting the arch, and included office frontages along Euston Road and a helicopter pad on the roof.[47][49] Redevelopment began on 12 July 1938, when 100,000 long tons (101,605 tonnes) of limestone was extracted for the building and new flats were constructed to rehouse people displaced by the works. The project was shelved indefinitely because of World War II.[47]

The station was damaged several times during the Blitz in 1940. Part of the Great Hall's roof was destroyed, and a bomb landed between platforms 2 and 3, destroying offices and part of the hotel.[47]

New station

[edit]
The Euston Arch being demolished, February 1962

Passengers considered Euston to be squalid and covered in soot and it was restored and redecorated in 1953, when an enquiry kiosk in the middle of the Great Hall was removed.[50][51] Ticket machines were modernised. By this time the Arch was surrounded by property development and kiosks and in need of restoration.[50]

British Railways announced that Euston would be rebuilt to accommodate the electrification of the West Coast Main Line in 1959.[50] Because of the restricted layout of track and tunnels at the northern end, enlargement only could be accomplished by expanding southwards over the area occupied by the Great Hall and the Arch.[50][52] Permission to demolish the Arch and Great Hall was sought from London County Council and it was granted on condition that the Arch would be restored and re-sited. BR estimated it would cost at least £190,000 (now £6,700,000) and was not viable.[50]

The Arch's demolition, announced by the Minister of Transport, Ernest Marples in July 1961, drew objections from the Earl of Euston, the Earl of Rosse and John Betjeman. Experts did not believe the work would cost £190,000 and speculated it could be done more cheaply by foreign labour. On 16 October 1961, 75 architects and students staged a demonstration against its demolition inside the Great Hall and a week later Sir Charles Wheeler led a deputation to speak with the Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. Macmillan replied that as well as the cost, there was nowhere large enough to relocate the Arch in keeping with its surroundings.[53]

Demolition began on 6 November and was completed within four months.[53] The station was rebuilt by Taylor Woodrow Construction to a design by London Midland Region architects of British Railways, William Robert Headley and Ray Moorcroft,[54][55] in consultation with Richard Seifert & Partners.[56] Redevelopment began in summer 1962 and progressed from east to west, the Great Hall was demolished and an 11,000-square-foot (1,000 m2) temporary building housed ticket offices and essential facilities.[53] Euston worked to 80% capacity during the works with at least 11 platforms in operation at any time.[57] Services were diverted elsewhere where practical and the station remained operational throughout the works.[53]

The first phase of construction involved building 18 platforms with two track bays to handle parcels above them, a signal and communications building and various staff offices. The parcel deck was reinforced using 5,500 tons of structural steelwork.[57] Signalling on the routes leading out of the station was reworked along with the electrification of the lines, including the British Rail Automatic Warning System.[58] Fifteen platforms had been completed by 1966, and the electric service began on 3 January. An automated parcel depot above platforms 3 to 18 opened on 7 August 1966.[12] The station was opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 14 October 1968.[59]

Platforms

The station is a long, low structure, 200 feet (61 m) wide and 150 feet (46 m) deep under a 36-foot (11 m) high roof. It opened with integrated automatic ticket facilities and a range of shops; the first of its kind for any British station.[59] The plan to construct offices above the station whose rents would help fund the cost of the rebuilding was scrapped after a government White Paper was released in 1963 that restricted the rate of commercial office development in London.[12]

In 1966, a "Whites only" recruitment policy for guards at the station was dropped after the case of Asquith Xavier, a migrant from Dominica, who had been refused promotion on those grounds, was raised in Parliament and taken up by the Secretary of State for Transport, Barbara Castle.[60]

A second development phase by Richard Seifert & Partners began in 1979, adding 405,000 square feet (37,600 m2) of office space along the station frontage in the form of three low-rise towers overlooking Melton Street and Eversholt Street.[61] The offices were occupied by British Rail,[62] then by Railtrack, and by Network Rail which has now vacated[b] all but a small portion of one of the towers. The offices are in a functional style; the main facing material is polished dark stone, complemented by white tiles, exposed concrete and plain glazing.[63]

The station has a large concourse separate from the train shed. Originally, no seats were installed there to deter vagrants and crime, but were added after complaints from passengers.[61] Few remnants of the older station remain: two Portland stone entrance lodges, the London and North Western Railway War Memorial and a statue of Robert Stephenson by Carlo Marochetti, from the old ticket hall, stands in the forecourt.[42]

A large statue by Eduardo Paolozzi named Piscator dedicated to German theatre director Erwin Piscator is sited at the front of the courtyard, which as of 2016 was reported to be deteriorating.[64] Other pieces of public art, including low stone benches by Paul de Monchaux around the courtyard, were commissioned by Network Rail in 1990.[65] The station has catering units and shops, a large ticket hall and an enclosed car park with over 200 spaces.[66] The lack of daylight on the platforms compares unfavourably with the glazed trainshed roofs of traditional Victorian railway stations, but the use of the space above as a parcels depot released the maximum space at ground level for platforms and passenger facilities.[67]

Since 1996, proposals have been formulated to reconstruct the Arch as part of the redevelopment of the station,[68] and its use as the terminus of the High Speed 2 line.[69]

Privatisation

[edit]

Ownership of the station transferred from British Rail to Railtrack in 1994, passing to Network Rail in 2002 following the collapse of Railtrack.[18] In 2005 Network Rail was reported to have long-term aspirations to redevelop the station, removing the 1960s buildings and providing more commercial space by using the "air rights" above the platforms.[70]

In 2007, British Land announced that it had won the tender to demolish and rebuild the station, spending some £250 million of its overall redevelopment budget of £1 billion for the area. The number of platforms would increase from 18 to 21.[71] In 2008, it was reported that the Arch could be rebuilt.[72] In September 2011, the demolition plans were cancelled, and Aedas was appointed to give the station a makeover.[73]

In July 2014 a statue of navigator and cartographer Matthew Flinders, who circumnavigated the globe and charted Australia, was unveiled at Euston; his grave was rumoured to lie under platform 15 at the station,[74] but had been relocated during the original station construction and in 2019 was found behind the station during excavation work for the HS2 line.[37][75]

High Speed 2

[edit]
Map of the area around Euston, with planned High Speed 2 redevelopment. The new line is drawn in orange (left). (The line to the right is High Speed 1 entering St Pancras International).

In March 2010 the Secretary of State for Transport, Andrew Adonis announced that Euston was the preferred southern terminus of the planned High Speed 2 line, which would connect to a newly built station near Curzon Street and Fazeley Street in Birmingham.[76] This would require expansion to the south and west to create new sufficiently long platforms. These plans involved a complete reconstruction, involving the demolition of 220 Camden Council flats, with half the station providing conventional train services and the new half high-speed trains. The Command Paper suggested rebuilding the Arch, and included an artist's impression.[77]

The station is to have seven new platforms dropped from an original planned eight, taking the total to 23, with 10 dedicated to HS2 services and 13 to conventional lines at a low level.[78] The flats demolished for the extension would be replaced by significant building work above. The Underground station would be rebuilt and connected to adjacent Euston Square station. As part of the extension beyond Birmingham, the Mayor of London's office believed it will be necessary to build the proposed Crossrail 2 line via Euston to relieve 10,000 extra passengers forecast to arrive during an average day.[79][80][81][82]

To relieve pressure on Euston during and after rebuilding for High Speed 2, HS2 Ltd has proposed the diversion of some services to Old Oak Common (for Crossrail). This would include eight commuter trains per hour originating/terminating between Tring and Milton Keynes Central inclusive.[83] In 2016, the Mayor Sadiq Khan endorsed the plans and suggested that all services should terminate at Old Oak Common while a more appropriate solution is found for Euston.[84]

The current scheme does not provide any direct access between High Speed 2 at Euston and the existing High Speed 1 at St Pancras. In 2015, plans were announced to link the two stations via a travelator service.[85] Platforms 17 and 18 closed in May and June 2019 for High Speed 2 preparation work.[86][87]

The Euston Downside Carriage Maintenance Depot was demolished in 2018 in preparation for the start of tunnelling.[88] The two office towers in front of the station were demolished between January 2019 and December 2020.[89][90] The third tower at 1 Eversholt Street is not part of these plans. Two hotels on Cardington Street adjacent to the west of the station were also demolished.[91] The cemetery in adjacent St James's Gardens was also controversially excavated in 2018-19, resulting in an estimated 60,000 graves having to be exhumed, and the entire site being cleared of all human remains – the largest exhumation in British history,[92] and the corpses having to be reburied in Brookwood Cemetery in Brookwood, Surrey.[93]

In August 2019, the Department for Transport (DfT) ordered an independent review of the project, chaired by the British civil engineer Douglas Oakervee.[94] The Oakervee Review was published by the Department for Transport the following February, alongside a statement from the Prime Minister Boris Johnson confirming that HS2 would go ahead in full, with reservations.[95] The review said the rebuild was "not satisfactory" and called the management "muddled" and recommended a change of governance.[96] In Summer 2020, the government asked Network Rail's chairman, Sir Peter Hendy, to lead an oversight board; in October 2020, the Architects' Journal reported that more than £100m had already been spent on engineering and architectural design fees.[96]

In October 2023, the Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced that construction of the Euston terminus and approach tunnel would not be government funded and that it could only go ahead with private sector investment.[97] Transport for London commissioner Andy Lord was sceptical that the private sector would pay for the link to Old Oak Common.[98]

Criticism

[edit]

Demolition of original station

[edit]

The demolition of the original buildings in 1962 was described by the Royal Institute of British Architects as "one of the greatest acts of Post-War architectural vandalism in Britain"[99][100] and was approved directly by Harold Macmillan.[101] The attempts made to preserve the earlier building, championed by Sir John Betjeman, led to the formation of the Victorian Society and heralded the modern conservation movement.[102] This movement saved the nearby high Gothic St Pancras station when threatened with demolition in 1966,[103] ultimately leading to its renovation in 2007 as the terminus of HS1 to the Continent.[104]

Architecture

[edit]
Euston station seen from above, in 2013

Euston's 1960s style of architecture has been described as "a dingy, grey, horizontal nothingness"[105] and a reflection of "the tawdry glamour of its time", entirely lacking in "the sense of occasion, of adventure, that the great Victorian termini gave to the traveller".[106] Writing in The Times, Richard Morrison stated that "even by the bleak standards of Sixties architecture, Euston is one of the nastiest concrete boxes in London: devoid of any decorative merit; seemingly concocted to induce maximum angst among passengers; and a blight on surrounding streets. The design should never have left the drawing-board – if, indeed, it was ever on a drawing-board. It gives the impression of having been scribbled on the back of a soiled paper bag by a thuggish android with a grudge against humanity and a vampiric loathing of sunlight".[107]

Passenger experience

[edit]

Michael Palin, explorer and travel writer, in his contribution to Great Railway Journeys titled "Confessions of a Trainspotter" in 1980, likened it to "a great bath, full of smooth, slippery surfaces where people can be sloshed about efficiently".[108] Journalist Barney Ronay described the station as "easily, easily the worst main station in Western Europe" and that using it is "like being taken away to be machine gunned in the woods by various mobile phone and soft drinks companies".[109]

Access to parts of the station is difficult for people with physical disability. The introduction of lifts in 2010 made the taxi rank and underground station accessible from the concourse, though some customers found them unreliable and frequently broken down.[110] Wayfindr technology was introduced to the station in 2015 to help people with visual impairment to navigate the station.[111]

In September 2023, the Office of Rail and Road issued Network Rail with an improvement notice in relation to its failure to put in place effective measures to tackle overcrowding.[112] Network Rail admitted that the station was designed for a different era and that "the passenger experience at Euston remains uncomfortable at times".[113] The Office of Rail and Road declared in December 2023 that Network Rail had complied with the notice and implemented measures to better manage passenger traffic flows and overcrowding.[114] In October 2024, London TravelWatch warned that passengers at Euston are being put in danger when the station becomes severely overcrowded during periods of disruption to services.[115] Transport Secretary Louise Haigh subsequently asked Network Rail to declutter the station concourse and improve how it handles train announcements.[116] Network Rail reacted by switching off the advertising board installed in January 2024 after removal of the main departure boards, and issued a five point improvement plan.[117]

Incidents

[edit]

On 26 April 1924, an electric multiple unit collided with the rear of an excursion train carrying passengers from the FA Cup Final in Coventry.[118] Five passengers were killed. The crash was blamed on poor visibility owing to smoke and steam under the Park Street Bridge.[119]

On 27 August 1928, a passenger train collided with the buffer stops. Thirty people were injured.[120]

On 10 November 1938, a suburban service collided with empty coaches after a signal was misinterpreted. 23 people were injured.[119]

On 6 August 1949, an empty train was accidentally routed towards a service for Manchester, colliding with it at about 5 mph (8 km/h). The crash was blamed on a lack of track circuiting and no proper indication of when platforms were occupied.[119]

1973 IRA attack

[edit]

Extensive but superficial damage was caused by an IRA bomb that exploded close to a snack bar at approximately 1:10 pm on 10 September 1973, injuring eight people.[121] A similar explosive had detonated 50 minutes earlier at King's Cross.[122] The Metropolitan Police had received a three-minute warning,[121] and were unable to evacuate the station completely, but British Transport Police managed to clear much of the area just before the explosion.[123] In 1974, the mentally ill Judith Ward confessed to the bombing and was convicted of this and other crimes, despite the evidence against her being highly suspect and Ward retracting her confessions. She was acquitted in 1992; the true culprit has yet to be identified.[124]

Cultural references

[edit]

The station has been the backdrop for a musical film clip as well as the subject in songs since the 1960s. Barbara Ruskin both wrote and recorded the song "Euston Station" which was released in 1967.[125][126] In 1969, rock group Ambrose Slade shot a promo film at the station for their Beginnings album. Craig Davies recorded the song "Euston Railway Station Blues" which was released in the late 1980s. Jane Kitto's 2002 song "Busdriver" is about getting on the no. 73 bus from Euston station to Stoke Newington. In another travel theme it was referenced by The Smiths in their song "London" as a way to get to the city from Manchester.[127]

National Rail services

[edit]

Euston has services from four different train operators:

Virgin Trains Class 390 (left) and Caledonian Sleeper Class 92 (right)
London Overground Class 378 entering Euston on the Lioness line from Watford Junction
London Midland Class 350 entering Euston from the West Coast Main Line

Avanti West Coast operates InterCity West Coast services:[128]

London Northwestern Railway operates regional and commuter services.[130]

London Overground operates local commuter services.

Caledonian Sleeper operates two nightly services to Scotland from Sunday to Friday inclusive.[132]

Great Western Railway will operate InterCity Greater Western services on occasional days from 2024–2030.[133]

Night Riviera will operate a nightly service to Cornwall from Sunday to Friday inclusive, on occasional days from 2024-2030.[133]

  • sleeper to Penzance via Taunton, Plymouth and St Austell .
Preceding station London Overground Following station
South Hampstead Lioness line Terminus
Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Watford Junction   Caledonian Sleeper
Lowland Caledonian Sleeper
  Terminus
Crewe   Caledonian Sleeper
Highland Caledonian Sleeper
(southbound)
  Terminus
Watford Junction   Caledonian Sleeper
Highland Caledonian Sleeper
(northbound)
  Terminus
Watford Junction or Milton Keynes Central   London Northwestern Railway
London – Crewe via the Trent Valley line
  Terminus
Harrow & Wealdstone or Watford Junction or Leighton Buzzard   London Northwestern Railway
London – Milton Keynes Central/Northampton/Birmingham
  Terminus
Harrow & Wealdstone or Wembley Central or Watford Junction   London Northwestern Railway
London Euston – Tring
  Terminus
Watford Junction or Milton Keynes Central or Coventry or Rugby   Avanti West Coast
WCML London – West Midlands – North West & Scotland
  Terminus
Milton Keynes Central or Nuneaton   Avanti West Coast
WCML London – Chester & North Wales
  Terminus
Watford Junction or Milton Keynes Central or Stafford or Crewe or Runcorn   Avanti West Coast
WCML London – Crewe – Liverpool
  Terminus
Watford Junction or Milton Keynes Central or Stafford or Stoke-on-Trent or Crewe   Avanti West Coast
WCML London – Manchester via Stoke-on-Trent or Crewe
  Terminus
Watford Junction or Milton Keynes Central or Tamworth or Warrington Bank Quay or Preston   Avanti West Coast
WCML London – North West & Scotland
  Terminus
Reading or Newbury or Swindon   Great Western Railway
Great Western Main Line
  Terminus
Reading   Great Western Railway
Night Riviera
  Terminus
Future services
Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Old Oak Common   Avanti West Coast
High Speed 2
  Terminus

London Underground

[edit]

Euston was poorly served by the early London Underground network. The nearest station on the Metropolitan line was Gower Street, around five minutes' walk away. A permanent connection did not appear until 12 May 1907, when the City & South London Railway opened an extension west from Angel. The Charing Cross, Euston & Hampstead Railway opened an adjacent station on 22 June in the same year; these two stations are now part of the Northern line. Gower Street station was quickly renamed Euston Square in response.[41] A connection to the Victoria line opened on 1 December 1968.[59]

The underground network around Euston is planned to change depending on the construction of High Speed 2. Transport for London (TfL) plans to change the safeguarded route for the proposed Chelsea–Hackney line to include Euston between Tottenham Court Road and King's Cross St Pancras.[134] As part of the rebuilding work for High Speed 2, it is proposed to integrate Euston and Euston Square into a single tube station.[80]

Preceding station London Underground Following station
Euston
Mornington Crescent Northern line
Charing Cross Branch
transfer at Euston
Warren Street
Camden Town Northern line
Bank Branch
transfer at Euston
King's Cross St Pancras
towards Morden
Warren Street
towards Brixton
Victoria line
transfer at Euston
King's Cross St Pancras
Euston Square
Great Portland Street
towards Hammersmith
Circle line
transfer at Euston Square
King's Cross St Pancras
towards Edgware Road via Aldgate
Hammersmith & City line
transfer at Euston Square
King's Cross St Pancras
towards Barking
Great Portland Street Metropolitan line
transfer at Euston Square
King's Cross St Pancras
towards Aldgate

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
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  2. ^ "Out of Station Interchanges" (XLSX). Transport for London. 16 June 2020. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Estimates of station usage". Rail statistics. Office of Rail Regulation. Please note: Some methodology may vary year on year.
  4. ^ "The Family". Euston Hall, Suffolk. Archived from the original on 4 June 2017. Retrieved 9 July 2017.
  5. ^ "Euston Station". Google Maps. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  6. ^ "Commercial information". Our Stations. London: Network Rail. April 2014. Archived from the original on 10 April 2014. Retrieved 12 April 2014.
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  10. ^ "Euston Bus Station". Transport for London.
  11. ^ a b "Euston Station, London". Network Rail. Archived from the original on 18 February 2013. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
  12. ^ a b c Jackson 1984, p. 54.
  13. ^ a b Jackson 1984, p. 31.
  14. ^ a b British Rail 1968, p. 5.
  15. ^ a b c British Rail 1968, p. 8.
  16. ^ a b Jackson 1984, p. 46.
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  24. ^ Cole 2011, p. 107.
  25. ^ a b Jackson 1984, p. 37.
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  70. ^ Carmona & Wunderlich 2013, p. 146.
  71. ^ Stewart, Dan (5 April 2007). "British Land wins £1bn Euston contract". Building.
  72. ^ Binney, Marcus (18 February 2008). "Landmark of the railway age may be resurrected". The Times. London. Archived from the original on 7 October 2008.(subscription required)
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  74. ^ Higgitt, Rebekah (18 July 2014). "Matthew Flinders bicentenary: statue unveiled to the most famous navigator you've probably never heard of". The Guardian Science blog. London. Retrieved 25 August 2014.
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  87. ^ "Euston Platform 17b to close on 19 May". Today's Railways UK. No. 209. May 2019. p. 20.
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  96. ^ a b Pitcher, Greg (9 October 2020). "More than £100m spent on Euston HS2 design fees and counting…". Architects' Journal.
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  113. ^ Simpson, Jack (4 October 2024). "Euston still has a problem". Railway Gazette International.
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  115. ^ Simpson, Jack (2 October 2024). "Overcrowding at London's Euston station 'puts passengers in danger'". The Guardian.
  116. ^ Lydall, Ross (4 October 2024). "Euston station's giant advertising board switched off in five-point plan to tackle overcrowding". Evening Standard.
  117. ^ Topham, Gwyn (4 October 2024). "Euston station's big advertising screens turned off after overcrowding fears". The Guardian.
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  125. ^ Keen, Jonathan. "Euston station: a muse for musicians, JONATHAN KEEN explores Euston's connection with music from its past, to the present and the future, THE PAST". Rail. No. April 7 - April 20, 2021. p. https://archive.org/details/rail-04.7.2021/mode/2up? Page 64.
  126. ^ Catalog of Copyright Entries: Third Series Volume 21, Part 5, Number 1, Section I
    Music Current and Renewal Registrations January-June 1967 - Page 167 EUSTON STATION: w & m Barbara Ruskin
  127. ^ Rail, April 7 - April 20, 2021 - Page 64 Euston station: a muse for musicians, JONATHAN KEEN explores Euston’s connection with music from its past, to the present and the future, THE PAST
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Sources

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