Upper Holloway railway station

Upper Holloway railway station is in Holloway, north London (N19). It is on the Gospel Oak to Barking Line, 3 miles 0 chains (4.8 km) from St Pancras (measured via Kentish Town and Mortimer Street Junction)[4] and is situated between Gospel Oak and Crouch Hill. It is operated by London Overground, and the service is one train every 15 minutes in each direction except late evenings when it is half-hourly. The line is now electrified, and services are operated by 4 car Class 710 EMUs.

Upper Holloway
The station in 2020
Upper Holloway
Location of Upper Holloway in Greater London
LocationUpper Holloway
Local authorityLondon Borough of Islington
Managed byLondon Overground
OwnerNetwork Rail
Station codeUHL
DfT categoryE
Number of platforms2
AccessibleYes[1]
Fare zone2
OSIArchway [2]
National Rail annual entry and exit
2015–16 1.292 million[3]
2016–17 0.415 million[3]
2017–18 0.696 million[3]
2018–19 1.088 million[3]
2019–20 0.974 million[3]
Key dates
1868Opened
Other information
External links
WGS8451.5638°N 0.1298°W / 51.5638; -0.1298
 London transport portal

The station is a short walk along Holloway Road from Archway on the Northern line. This is currently the most convenient interchange between the two lines, given as 490 yards (450 m) on the tube map and maps inside London Overground trains.

Connections

London Buses routes 17, 43, 263, 271 and night route N41 serve the station.[5]

Station Infrastructure

Station facilities are basic with little at street level other than a few signs to indicate the presence of a station. Holloway Road passes over the line and steps and ramps for wheelchair users, buggies, bikes etc. on either side of the bridge lead directly down to the platforms. There are information points, CCTV cameras, information screens and loudspeakers. There are brick-built shelters on each platform and the station staff operate out of a small portable office.

Signs of the station's past remain. The building which used to be the ticket office can be seen beside the south entrance (for trains towards Gospel Oak). A footbridge over the track remains but this is closed and the only way over the track is by Holloway Road. The platforms were originally built to accommodate longer trains. The unused sections of platform remain but are closed and in a poor state of repair. The signal box at the end of the platform is still in use.

As of summer 2008, the station has been repainted and re-signed in London Overground colours, with the green-painted staircase railings (for example) of the former Silverlink franchise giving way to Overground orange.

The station was formerly located between Junction Road and Hornsey Road station, which both closed in 1943. The cause of the closures was in part related to their close proximity to Upper Holloway station.

The station is in Travelcard Zone 2.

Services

There is a 15-minute interval service in operations on both directions throughout the week (including Sundays).[6] From 16 May 2016 until February 2017 however, route upgrade and modernisation work on the route (as part of planned electrification) saw the line closed completely east of South Tottenham from 6 June 2016 and all the way from Gospel Oak to Barking from 24 September. Replacement buses operated over the affected sections of line.[7] Weekday trains resumed on 27 February 2017 and the work was completed and commissioned in December 2017.

References

  1. "London and South East" (PDF). National Rail. September 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 March 2009.
  2. "Out-of-Station Interchanges" (Microsoft Excel). Transport for London. 2 January 2016. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  3. "Station usage estimates". Rail statistics. Office of Rail Regulation. Please note: Some methodology may vary year on year.
  4. Yonge, John; Padgett, David; Szwenk, John (August 2013) [1990]. Bridge, Mike (ed.). Railway Track Diagrams 4: Midlands & North West (3rd ed.). Bradford on Avon: Trackmaps. map 1R. ISBN 978-0-9549866-7-4.
  5. "Upper Holloway Station (Stop T)". Transport for London. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  6. Table 62 National Rail timetable, December 2016
  7. "TfL tries to reduce line-closure time for GOBLIN electrification" Rail Technology Magazine article 2 February 2016; Retrieved 23 May 2016
Preceding station   London Overground   Following station
Terminus
Gospel Oak to Barking Line
towards Barking
  Disused Railways  
Junction Road   Tottenham & Hampstead Junction Railway   Hornsey Road
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