Hillhead subway station

Last updated

Hillhead
Scottish Gaelic: Hillhead [1] Glasgow Subway.svg
In Glasgow Subway Hillhead Station 05.jpg
General information
Location248 Byres Road
Hillhead, Glasgow, G12 8SH [2]
Scotland
Coordinates 55°52′33″N4°17′32″W / 55.87583°N 4.29222°W / 55.87583; -4.29222 Coordinates: 55°52′33″N4°17′32″W / 55.87583°N 4.29222°W / 55.87583; -4.29222
Operated by SPT
Platforms2 (side platforms)
Tracks2
Construction
Structure typeUnderground
ParkingNo [2]
Bicycle facilitiesNo [2]
Disabled accessNo [3]
History
Opened14 December 1896
Rebuilt16 April 1980;42 years ago (1980-04-16)
Passengers
2018Increase2.svg 1.831 million [4]
Preceding station Glasgow Subway.svg SPT Following station
Kelvinhall
anticlockwise / inner circle
Glasgow Subway Kelvinbridge
clockwise / outer circle
Location Hillhead subway station Notes
Passenger statistics provided are gate entries only. Information on gate exits for patronage is incomplete, and thus not included. [7]

Hillhead subway station is a station on the Glasgow Subway, serving the Hillhead area of Glasgow, Scotland. The entrance is located on Byres Road.

Contents

This station is the nearest to Glasgow Botanic Gardens and the University of Glasgow.

The station is one of the busiest on the system with 1.86 million boardings per year. [8] This is largely due to the shopping facilities of Byres Road and proximity to the university, which allows students to travel between campus and the city centre.

History

During the modernisation of the underground system between 1977 and 1980, Hillhead subway station went through major rebuilding. Previously the station had a single island platform serving both tracks; the station was rebuilt with a much more spacious ticket office, escalators and an additional side platform.

Hillhead is one of the stations mentioned in Cliff Hanley's song The Glasgow Underground. The song reflects the traditional local pronunciation of the name, "Hillheed". [9]

Current layout

There are three automated ticket machines located in the entrance way, which leads up to an information centre where passengers may buy tickets of longer duration and get more information on transport in Glasgow. Then there is the ticket office which is manned by one staff member at a time. There are six turnstiles into which a ticket must be entered in order to pass. There are three for entering and three for exiting the subway.

Two escalators and one staircase provide access to the two platforms, and maps are present to guide passengers to the correct platform for their destination.

This is the only station on the network to feature a retail unit inside the station. Beside the ticket office, there is a Costa Pronto store.

The platform features, on one side, a perspex barrier with a handrail which was built for safety reasons. [10]

Modernisation

Hillhead was the first station to be upgraded as part of SPT's plan to modernise the Subway at a cost of £1.5million. Under the plans, the escalators were replaced and the interior design was refreshed. Lighting and facilities for disabled people were also be improved. In addition, SPT commissioned author and artist Alasdair Gray to create a piece of public artwork for the station. The improvement work was completed in 2012. [11]

Alasdair Gray mural

On 16 September 2012 a mural that depicts the surrounding area was unveiled in the station's foyer. The work is by Alasdair Gray, and was developed over fourteen months with artist Nichol Wheatley using ceramics. Gray stated, "The station is in the centre of Hillhead, which I know well. Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, the old BBC building and Botanic Gardens had been among my favourite places since the age of eleven. I have lived and worked in the district since 1969, and I knew I would enjoy depicting it, and those who use the subway, in a symbolic and humorous way." [12]

Past passenger numbers

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References

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