Arnos Grove tube station

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Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox London station

Arnos Grove (Template:IPAc-en) is a London Underground station. It is located in Arnos Grove in the London Borough of Enfield, North London. The station is on the Piccadilly line, between Bounds Green and Southgate stations. It is in London fare zone 4.<ref>Template:Cite map/Standard Tube Map</ref>

The station opened on 19 September 1932 as the most northerly station on the first section of the Piccadilly line extension from Finsbury Park to Cockfosters. It was the terminus of the line until services were further extended to Oakwood on 13 March 1933. When travelling from east of Barons Court and through Central London, Arnos Grove is the first surface station after the long tunnel section of the Piccadilly line. The station has four platforms which face three tracks.

The station was designed by architect Charles Holden, and has been described as a significant work of modern architecture. On 19 February 1971, the station was Grade II listed. In 2005, the station was refurbished with the heritage features also maintained. In July 2011 Arnos Grove's listed status was upgraded to Grade II*.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The station was awarded with the Best Newcomer and the Best Overall Garden in the Underground in Bloom 2011 competition and also in the London in Bloom competition.

Location

The station is located on A1110 Bowes Road, serving a medium-sized residential area. Arnos Grove is the first surface station after the long tunnel section which starts east of Barons Court and passes through Central London.<ref name=culgpiccadilly>Template:Cite web</ref> The station and surrounding neighbourhood of Arnos Grove take their names from the Arnos Grove estate, which was to the north of the station.<ref name="HL">Template:Cite web</ref> The station is part of the Arnos Grove group of stations, comprising all seven stations from Cockfosters to Turnpike Lane, and the management office for the group is in Arnos Grove station. Linked to the station by a lineside passageway is Ash House, which is a drivers' depot. Nearby attractions include Arnos Park, Broomfield School and Bowes Road Library.<ref name=maps>Template:Cite web</ref> Arnos Grove is known for its circular ticket hall and as a quiet, peaceful and green neighbourhood until the 1960s. When the Piccadilly line extension came, Edwardian villas were built in the area.Template:Sfn

History

The Great Northern Railway (GNR) and its successor, the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER), for many years refused consent for any extension into the suburbs of Haringey and Enfield. In 1902, parliamentary approval was obtained to ban any further extensions of London Underground lines northwards from Finsbury Park. This created a bottleneck at Finsbury Park, back then the northern terminus of the Piccadilly line.<ref group="note">Passengers heading to places north of Finsbury Park such as Arnos Grove had to change to buses, trams or change onto Great Northern trains.</ref> By 1923, a public campaign against the 1902 parliamentary ban emerged, and Frank Pick had risen to assistant managing director of the Underground group. To help address this issue, Frank Pick gathered photographs of the congestion at Finsbury Park and distributed to the press. In 1925, the LNER gave in to the objection. Pick began working on the extension proposal and obtained parliamentary approval in 1929. The alignment was based on the absence of property development along the line. Funding was obtained from legislation under the Development (Loan Guarantees and Grants) Act 1929 instead of the Trade Facilities Act. Tunnel rings, cabling and concrete were produced in Northern England, while unemployed industrial workers there helped in the construction of the extension.Template:Sfn 22 tunnelling shields were used during construction which started in 1930. The station was opened on 19 September 1932 as the terminus on the first section of the Piccadilly line extension to Cockfosters. The line was further extended to Oakwood on 13 March 1933.<ref name=culgpiccadilly/> Its name was chosen after public deliberation: alternatives were "Arnos Park", "Bowes Road" and "Southgate".<ref name="Dumayne">Template:Cite book</ref>

Incidents

On the night of 13 October 1940, during the Blitz, a lone German aircraft dropped a single bomb on houses to the north of Bounds Green station. The destruction of the houses caused the north end of the westbound platform tunnel to collapse.<ref name=blitz>Template:Cite web</ref> As a result, train services between Wood Green and Cockfosters were disrupted for two months. On 11 August 1948, a passenger train was derailed when the front and rear bogies of a carriage took different routes at a set of points at the station.<ref name=Earnshaw8>Template:Cite book</ref> On 7 July 2005, a bomb exploded on a train travelling between King's Cross St. Pancras and Russell Square. Train services between Hyde Park Corner and Arnos Grove were disrupted until 4 August of the same year.<ref name=culgpiccadilly/>

Station building

Like the other stations Charles Holden designed for the extension, Arnos Grove was built in a modern European style using brick, glass and reinforced concrete and basic geometric shapes.<ref name="eh_1358981"/> A circular drum-like ticket hall of brick and glass panels rises from a low single-storey structure and is capped by a flat concrete slab roof.<ref name="eh_1358981"/> The design was said to be inspired by the Stockholm City Library and Swedish architect Gunnar Asplund,<ref name="guardian_2007oct16">Template:Cite news</ref><ref group="note">A similar design was employed by Holden for the rebuilding of Chiswick Park on the District line (also in 1932), although the drum there is supplemented with an adjacent brick tower.<ref>Template:NHLE</ref></ref>, although Charles Hutton, Holden's chief assistant stated Holden based the idea on a groundsman's lodge at Midhurst Sanatorium designed by Adams, Holden, and Pearson in 1904–1906.<ref name=historicengland>Template:Cite web</ref> The centre of the ticket hall is occupied by a disused ticket office (a passimeter in London Underground parlance)<ref name=refurbishment>Template:Cite news</ref> which houses an exhibition on the station and the line. The original design by Holden was detailed by Charles Hutton, who also had to amend the construction method from Sudbury Town tube station due to issues with leaking shuttering for the concrete roof discolouring the brickwork.<ref name=historicengland/>

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The station today

Station interior, showing the circular drum-like ticket hall.

Three parallel train tracks pass through the station, with two double-sided platforms between the central track and the outer tracks.<ref name=culgpiccadilly/> The edges of the platforms are labelled platform 1 and 2, and platform 3 and 4, in such a way that the two outer tracks are accessible from platforms 1 and 4, and the central track, usually used by trains that terminate and reverse at Arnos Grove station, is accessible from platforms 2 and 3.<ref name=culgpiccadilly/> Platforms 1 and 2 are designated for trains to Cockfosters while platforms 3 and 4 are for trains to Central London.<ref name=culgpiccadilly/>

When operating a shuttle service between Arnos Grove and Cockfosters, the central track is used exclusively as it has access to both running tracks to/from Southgate (the outer tracks do not have this access).

In July 2011 Arnos Grove became a Grade II* listed building.<ref name="eh_16">Template:Cite web</ref> The building is one of the 12 "Great Modern Buildings" profiled in The Guardian during October 2007.<ref name="Guardian">Template:Cite news</ref><ref group="note">It was summarised by architectural critic Jonathan Glancey as "...truly what German art historians would describe as a gesamtkunstwerk, a total and entire work of art."<ref name="guardian_2007oct16" /></ref> Arnos Grove Drivers' Depot won Best Newcomer and Best Overall Garden in the Underground in Bloom 2011 competition<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> for their new project which also got them an award in the London in Bloom competition. Their website<ref name="agdd">Template:Cite web</ref> tells the whole story with photographs of the garden and the awards ceremonies.

Station improvements

In 2005 the station underwent a refurbishment programme<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> including improvements to signage, security and train information systems. General repairs and redecoration were carried out, flooring was renewed, and better lighting, an improved CCTV security system and Help Points were installed, with the latter being suitable for people with limited hearing. Some of the original signs are in a 'petit-serif' adaptation of the London Underground typeface, Johnston Delf Smith Sans.<ref name=refurbishment/> This typeface was designed by Charles Holden and Percy Delf Smith, a former pupil of Edward Johnston.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Civic and Memorial Lettering">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

During the refurbishment programme, all these heritage features were maintained as well:<ref name=refurbishment/>

  • The circular 'Sudbury box' red brick building with overhanging crenellated concrete roof and vestibule to front and left-hand elevations
  • Dark red brick walls extending to either side of building and also on bridge parapet wall and also on the other side of Bowes Road
  • Bronze-framed silhouette roundels with reinstated 1930s graphics on concrete backing panels on brick walls at either end of bus slip road
  • Flag pole mounted silhouette roundel with reinstated 1930s graphics on vestibule roof
  • Full height windows

Services and connections

Platforms at Arnos Grove Station
The central Piccadilly line platforms at the station.

Services

Arnos Grove station is on the Piccadilly line between Bounds Green to the west and Southgate to the east. A Piccadilly line journey between Arnos Grove and Southgate typically takes slightly more than four minutes.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Train frequencies vary throughout the day, but generally operate every 3–9 minutes between 07:07 and 01:07 eastbound,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and every 2–6 minutes between 05:19 and 00:06 westbound.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> When operational problems occur on the line, Arnos Grove station may act as a temporary terminus of a reduced service – either a shuttle service between Arnos Grove and Cockfosters or a truncated service from Central London.<ref name=culgpiccadilly/> The station has a set of seven sidings to its south for stabling trains.<ref name=maps/><ref>Template:Cite map</ref>

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Connections

London Buses routes 34, 184, 232, 251, 298, 382, SL1 and night route N91 serve the station.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

New Southgate railway station is a ten-minute walk from Arnos Grove.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Nearby places

Notes and references

Notes

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References

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Bibliography

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