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District line

Tube Stop Baby: Upminster

April 3, 2019 by Penny Leave a Comment

Remember our plan to take a photograph of Tube Stop Baby with the roundel at each station we visited? Well, our trip to Upminster revealed a bit of a flaw in that plan. It turns out Upminster doesn’t have a roundel. Nor do Barking, Richmond and Wimbledon.

The “problem” is that these stations are all not owned or managed by TfL despite being served by London Underground, hence none of them have the classic TfL roundel signage at them! Yet another example of why I should do my research before we head out with our Oyster cards.

Not realising the lack of London Underground branding until we got there made Upminster seem like a bit of an anticlimax in our day’s travels. After the Art Deco feel at Upminster Bridge, Upminster just felt a bit anonymous if you know what I mean.

Upminster London Underground Tube Stop Baby

If you look carefully, there is one roundel to be found at Upminster though. One the side of the District Line signal box that you can see at eastern end of platform 5.

Upminster London Underground Tube Stop Baby

It’s not really positioned so that we could get a photo of Tube Stop Baby with it, so instead we made do with the roundel at the bus stop outside the station instead.

As well as being at the Eastern end of the District Line, Upminster is served by the c2c trains out of London’s Fenchurch Street (a station that has to be visited purely because it’s on the Monopoly board!) and also is the terminus for the Romford to Upminster part of the London Overground.

Upminster London Underground Tube Stop Baby

If you head up towards the ticket hall, there’s a nice old Lightbox indicator telling you which platform to go to next for an Underground train. There are a total of six platforms at Upminster, with three of them (platforms 3, 4 and 5) used by the District Line.

Upminster London Underground Tube Stop Baby

Despite not being a TfL station there is still a labyrinth to find. Number 76.

Tube Stop Baby Facts – Upminster

Date of visit: 29 January 2019

Underground Line(s) – District

Zone: 6

If you want to know more about our Tube Stop Baby Challenge then pop over here and have a read.

Filed Under: Tube Stop Baby Tagged With: District line, London, London underground, travel, Tube Challenge, Tube Stop Baby, Upminster

Tube Stop Baby: Upminster Bridge

April 2, 2019 by Penny Leave a Comment

One more stop out on the District Line from Hornchurch we came to Upminster Bridge. Yet another station where we only got to see the platforms and having done my reading up on the station afterwards I’m really kicking myself that I didn’t do my research beforehand.

Upminster Bridge Tube Stop Baby London Underground

Upminster Bridge station it seems is famous for what everyone walks over on their way in and out – a swastika pattern formed in the cream and brown floor tiles in the booking hall. Dated (as you’d expect!) before the Second World War, this was actually a popular decorative design when the Art Deco ticket office was built before its opening in 1934.

Upminster Bridge Tube Stop Baby London Underground

Despite not seeing the street level part of the station, which is incidentally is below the platforms which are up on an embankment with stairs between the two, the platforms themselves are with further discussion.

Continuing the Art Deco theme from the ticket hall, the platforms themselves have more than a slight mod towards the design of that era too. Especially with the seating on the platforms.

Upminster Bridge Tube Stop Baby London Underground

What I can’t yet get to the bottom of is whether these are original or not. Searching online I keep finding photos of the platforms at Upminster Bridge with different, more modern style, traditional TfL seats on them, but I can’t work out if these were taken away and replaced with the Art Deco style ones, or if they’re just at different ends of the platform and both are there. This really is why I ought to do so much more research before these trips so I can check all the facts out for myself whilst there! If you know any more about this though then please, please leave me a comment down below.

Upminster Bridge Tube Stop Baby London Underground

What I am sure about at Upminster Bridge though is the fact that there is a central island platform serving both East and Westbound on the District line, and then the c2c fast tracks run next to the Westbound District line track.

Tube Stop Baby Facts – Upminster Bridge

Date of visit: 29 January 2019

Underground Line(s) – District

Zone: 6

If you want to know more about our Tube Stop Baby Challenge then pop over here and have a read.

Filed Under: Tube Stop Baby Tagged With: District line, London, London underground, The Tube, travel, Tube, Tube Challenge, Tube Stop Baby, Upminster Bridge

Tube Stop Baby: Hornchurch

March 29, 2019 by Penny Leave a Comment

After visiting Elm Park we decided to continue along the line, away from central London, and made Hornchurch our next stop. This was a station where we didn’t have time to head outside of the station, although in this case I’m not sure there was that much to see out there either.

Tube Stop Baby Hornchurch London Underground

There is no step-free access at Hornchurch, although I am told that there are a pair of disused lift shafts connecting the platforms and the booking hall.

Down at platform level there are two platforms serving the District line that are positioned either side of the tracks – platform 1 for Westbound and platform 2 for Eastbound. There are also two disused platforms that used to serve the National Rail service through the station. This was withdrawn from Hornchurch in 1962, but the platforms remain physically there and you can see the c2c services passing through the station.

Tube Stop Baby Hornchurch London Underground

The District Line platforms do at least provide toilets and a waiting room on the Westbound platform, but otherwise there isn’t really much to comment on there. I believe the station was on a list of stations to be renovated by Metronet back before it went into administration in 2007. When responsibility moved back to TfL in 2008 Hornchurch was put into the “limited works” category, meaning that improvements would be made incrementally, following TfL’s need to preserve assets.

Tube Stop Baby Facts – Hornchurch

Date of visit: 29 January 2019

Underground Line(s) – District

Zone: 6

If you want to know more about our Tube Stop Baby Challenge then pop over here and have a read.

Filed Under: Tube Stop Baby Tagged With: District line, Hornchurch, London underground, Tube Challenge, Tube Stop Baby

Tube Stop Baby: Elm Park

March 27, 2019 by Penny Leave a Comment

I’m not sure I even knew where Elm Park was until I took a good look at the Eastern end of the District Line on a tube map. Bonn had a job out that side of London and as Tube Stop Baby and I were at a loose end I decided to use it as an opportunity to tick a few more stations off our list. Elm Park jumped out as somewhere to start our adventure for the simple reason that it had step-free access. We manage to lift the pram up most staircases on the tube, but it’s nice not to have to!

Elm Park London Underground Tube Stop Baby

I can’t lie about it. Elm Park isn’t exactly the most thrilling station I’ve visited on our tube travels. Opened in 1935 the station is situated between Dagenham East and Hornchurch and is in the London Borough of Havering.

The station has a central island platform, serving one track in each direction. There is then a long slope back up from the platforms to the ticket office (hence the stair-free access), which is on a road bridge over the railway line.

Elm Park London Underground Tube Stop Baby

The slope leading down to the District Line platforms. 

Elm Park London Underground Tube Stop Baby

Outside the station we did spot a sweet addition in the form of The Hobby Shop Special. Looking like it may need a new coat of paint soon, this is the original work of Elm Park Primary School, with additional pictures behind from St Alban’s Catholic Primary School.

Elm Park London Underground Tube Stop Baby

And for anyone keeping track of the labyrinths around the tube network, Elm Park hosts number 79, which is very easy to spot as you walk down the slope from the ticket office to the platforms.

Elm Park London Underground Tube Stop Baby

Tube Stop Baby Facts – Elm Park

Date of visit: 29 January 2019

Underground Line(s) – District

Zone: 6

If you want to know more about our Tube Stop Baby Challenge then pop over here and have a read.

Filed Under: Tube Stop Baby Tagged With: District line, Elm Park, London, London underground, Tube Challenge, Tube Stop Baby

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