Sunday, 13 January 2013

2. Victoria


Saturday 12th January, about 5.30pm

For years I never went near Victoria - I had no need to, because apart from two theatres very near the station there's no other reason to be there. But then I knew people who travelled into London by train from the south and I started going there to meet them.

It's the second busiest Tube station, which shouldn't be a surprise if I think about it, and it is always horribly hectic, which isn't helped by the fact that it seems to have been undergoing changes for as long as anyone can remember - much like the roads above it, which have been dug up and covered in cones forever.

It's a shame the station isn't a bit nicer as I have a fondness for the line it takes its name from - it's short, but surprisingly useful, and the blue colour is my second favourite colour for a Tube line (the darker blue of the Piccadilly line being my favourite). Perhaps when all the upgrade work is finished in 2018 I'll love it more?

Wikipedia entry here

1. King's Cross St. Pancras


Saturday 12th January, 9.45am

The first thing that surprised me when I took this photograph is that the station is now called "King's Cross St. Pancras" and, I assume, has been since Eurostar relocated to the rejuvenated St. Pancras a few years ago. But I'd never noticed and habitually call it just "King's Cross".

This is probably the Tube station I have visited the most as, for the last twenty years or so, all trains from my part of Norfolk have terminated at the railway station above it. It's the third busiest Tube station and serves more lines than any other, which is why for a long time I felt no love for it and needed to take a deep breath before throwing myself down those cramped stairs from the departure hall into it.

But things have changed in recent years as they've upgraded it and there are now big wide corridors to get to the trains and the whole thing feels really light and spacious, at least until you get down to the platforms. It's all very grey and concretey, much like the Jubilee line, but instead of looking dull and sad I think it looks modern and almost chic. And more importantly it just works really well (although getting back to the railway station still manages to confuse me).

I guess I like it because arriving there usually means I have something exciting to look forward to or that I'm heading home after a nice day.

Meanwhile upstairs the railway station has been upgraded too and is stunning! It was also the subject of a song by the Pet Shop Boys:



Tracey Thorn also did a version of it (she wants to make an album with them - someone make this happen then I can die a happy man!). They also used it as a location for their video of Rent, which Derek Jarman directed. (I now that has nothing to do with the Tube, but I do like a tangent!)



Wikipedia entry here.

Introduction


There are 270 stations on the London Underground and this is going to be my attempt at recording how many I visit. You can visit them all in one day, and the current world record for doing that is 16 hours, 29 minutes and 13 seconds, but I'm not going to do that. Instead I just want to add them organically as I travel round London, although I'm sure at some point the middle-aged man in me will want to complete the set and will find an excuse to venture to the furthest ends of the Central line.

For the purpose of this blog "visit" means enter or exit the station from above ground, and arrive or depart from it by Tube. So places where I just wait underground to change lines, or places I just go through don't count.

It was inspired by this week's 150th Anniversary of the opening of the Metropolitan line but is the inevitable outcome of an adult lifetime of loving London, because let's face it nothing that makes you think "London" than the Tube sign does it?

I don't intend this to be factual - that kind of information already exists. Instead this will just be subjective really - just a little bit about what I think of the station, why I was there, and a picture of the station name as proof. Of course I'm sure that along the way I'll inadvertently reveal some stuff about myself, but that's not really what this is about, so it's also an excuse to try writing in a slightly different way.

Anyway, here's some things I like about the Tube:

  • The whoosh of air through the platform and station as trains come and go.
  • The lovely blue of the Piccadilly line.
  • The Oyster card.

Some things about the Tube that puzzle me:

Having been on the subway in New York and Barcelona - he said, showing off - they've got plastic seats and no advertising, yet in London the seats are all padded and there's adverts everywhere. So, two questions: are we so soft that we can't sit on plastic? And is the advertising paying for the trains? If so, how do the others pay for theirs?

But mostly I just love the fact that only a few years after railways were invented someone thought, "wouldn't it be great to put the trains underground?" and lots of people agreed with them and they just made it happen. Those Victorians really were amazing weren't they?

Before we get started here are some things about the Tube you might enjoy:


Tube Crush - because every journey deserves one.

London Transport Museum Shop - because nothing makes washing up more fun than a tea towel with a Tube map on it

Ready? Mind the doors, this blog is ready to depart...