Arsenal tube station

Last updated

Arsenal Underground no-text.svg
Arsenal station entrance.JPG
Station entrance
Greater London UK location map 2.svg
Red pog.svg
Arsenal
Location of Arsenal in Greater London
Location Highbury
Local authority London Borough of Islington
Managed by London Underground
Number of platforms2
Fare zone 2
London Underground annual entry and exit
2019Decrease2.svg 2.77 million [1]
2020Decrease2.svg 1.00 million [2]
2021Increase2.svg 1.21 million [3]
2022Increase2.svg 2.12 million [4]
2023Increase2.svg 2.20 million [5]
Railway companies
Original company Great Northern, Piccadilly and Brompton Railway
Key dates
15 December 1906Opened as Gillespie Road
31 October 1932Renamed Arsenal (Highbury Hill)
c. 1960Renamed Arsenal
Other information
External links
Coordinates 51°33′31″N0°06′21″W / 51.55861°N 0.10583°W / 51.55861; -0.10583
Underground sign at Westminster.jpg London transportportal

Arsenal is a London Underground station located in Highbury, London. It is on the Piccadilly line, between Holloway Road and Finsbury Park stations, in Travelcard Zone 2. [6] Originally known as Gillespie Road, it was renamed in 1932 after Arsenal Football Club, who at the time played at the nearby Highbury Stadium. It is the only tube station named directly after a football club. [lower-alpha 1] Although Highbury Stadium closed in 2006, the station retains its name and is still used by spectators attending matches at Arsenal's nearby Emirates Stadium.

Contents

Location

The station is located on a narrow Victorian residential street, away from any main roads. [7] It is also unusual in not having any bus routes pass its entrance, though routes 4, 19, 106 and 236 serve nearby Blackstock Road. [8]

History

Tiling on the platform indicates the station's previous guise as "Gillespie Road". Arsenal tube station interior.jpg
Tiling on the platform indicates the station's previous guise as "Gillespie Road".

Arsenal tube station was opened by the Great Northern, Piccadilly and Brompton Railway (GNP&BR) as Gillespie Road on 15 December 1906. [9] [10] The GNP&BR was later renamed the Piccadilly line after the consolidation and nationalisation of the Tube network as London Underground. The original station building and ticket hall were red terracotta-clad buildings designed by Leslie Green, similar to neighbouring stations such as Holloway Road and Caledonian Road.

At the time of Gillespie Road's construction, it served a residential area and a local divinity college.[ citation needed ] In 1913, Arsenal F.C. moved from Woolwich to Highbury on the site of the college's playing fields, and the club's presence there eventually led to a campaign for a change of name. Arsenal manager Herbert Chapman was a particularly keen advocate, and on 31 October 1932 it was renamed Arsenal (Highbury Hill). [11] The station was expanded in the 1930s, when the original station building was demolished and replaced by a wider building of a more modern design.

The suffix was dropped from the station's name some time around 1960, giving the current name of Arsenal. [lower-alpha 2] The original tiled walls of the platforms still bear the Gillespie Road name, spelt out in large letters. [16] In 2007, the station underwent a major upgrade; [17] as part of this the wall tiling was completely restored, the floor resurfaced and an electronic Tannoy system was introduced. [18]

Station layout

Passageway linking the ticket office to the platforms, looking towards the latter. Note tidal flow segregation, in operation on football match days. The fans would use the wider section. Tidal segregation at Arsenal, 2021.jpg
Passageway linking the ticket office to the platforms, looking towards the latter. Note tidal flow segregation, in operation on football match days. The fans would use the wider section.

When it was first built, the station building was squeezed between residential properties on each side, occupying the width of just two terraced houses. Even after the surface building was rebuilt and widened in the early 1930s, with a further house being demolished, it has one of the narrowest frontages of any Underground station.

Unusually for a "deep level" tube station, Arsenal possesses neither escalators nor lifts. Instead, a sloping passageway leads down to the platforms. This is due to the tunnels being both relatively shallow at this point and situated some distance from the station entrance (being underneath the East Coast Main Line). There are short flights of stairs at both ends of the passageway, so the station is not wheelchair accessible. When the station was rebuilt in the early 1930s, an extra tunnel was dug to platform level from the main access passage in anticipation of increased traffic. This is now used to handle the large crowds on match days. The station has a "tidal" system unique on the Underground network, with a narrow section on one side divided from the main passageway by a full-height fence. The narrow section is used on match days for the lighter flow, according to time of day—for passengers catching trains before matches, or leaving the station afterwards.

Usage

Map of Arsenal's old and new stadiums in relation to Arsenal tube station Ashburton Grove.svg
Map of Arsenal's old and new stadiums in relation to Arsenal tube station

The station is considerably less busy than other stations on the same stretch of line. In 2007 only 2,735,000 entries and exits were recorded, compared with Holloway Road's 7,487,000 and Caledonian Road's 5,333,000. [19]

In 2006 Arsenal F.C. moved to a new stadium, the Emirates Stadium. The stadium is on the site of Ashburton Grove, a former industrial estate approximately 500 metres (1,600 ft) west of Highbury, and marginally closer to Drayton Park (on the Northern City Line) and Holloway Road stations. [lower-alpha 3] However, Drayton Park is closed on match days due to its small platform size and infrequent service (before 2015 it had no weekend service at all), and trains do not stop at Holloway Road before and after matches to prevent overcrowding. Arsenal station meanwhile is still within easy walking distance of the new stadium's main entrance and is recommended by the club for use on match days. [20] The station thus still retains the "Arsenal" name and, along with Finsbury Park and Highbury & Islington, is still used by many Arsenal supporters to get to matches.

As part of the commemoration of Arsenal F.C.'s move, a temporary mural was placed along the walls of the station passageways as part of London Underground's Art on the Underground scheme. [21] It was unveiled in February 2006 and removed in September.

Services and connections

Piccadilly line train at Arsenal Arsenal Underground Station.jpg
Piccadilly line train at Arsenal

Train frequencies vary throughout the day, but generally operate every 2–6 minutes between 06:22 and 00:19 in both directions. [22] [23]

No bus routes directly serve the station. However, London Bus routes 4, 19, 29, 91, 106, 153, 236, 253, 254 and 259 and night routes N19, N29, N91, N253 and N279 are all nearby. [24] [25]

Notes

  1. Several tube stations, including West Ham and Wimbledon, share their names with football clubs, but only Arsenal was named directly after a club rather than the associated area.
  2. An early 1960 edition [12] of the Tube map shows the "Highbury Hill" suffix but one from later in 1960 [13] shows it without. No subsequent maps include the suffix. [14] [15]
  3. This is as measured from the pitch itself; measured from the main entrance to the stadium complex in the northeast corner, Arsenal remains the closest station.

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References

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Further reading

Preceding station Underground no-text.svg London Underground Following station
Holloway Road Piccadilly line Finsbury Park