Travel
 

Hammersmith & City Line

From London Wiki

TUBE LINE
Hammersmith & City
Colour on Map Salmon Pink
Year Opened 1863
Line Type Sub-Surface
Rolling Stock C-stock
Stations Served 28
Length 26.5km (16.5 mi)
Annual Passengers 45,845,000
Depots Hammersmith
Neasden

The Hammersmith and City line is a line of the London Underground, coloured salmon pink on the London Underground Map, running between Hammersmith in West London and Barking in East London. Formerly part of the Metropolitan line, part of it is the oldest underground railway in the world, as it includes the first part of the London Underground, the section between Paddington and Farringdon, which opened on January 10, 1863. It ranks 10th out of the 11 lines in passenger numbers. Out of the 28 stations served, 14 are underground. The original line opened on the June 13, 1864, although Hammersmith moved to a different location in 1868. With the exception of the two-stop Waterloo & City Line and the East London Line (which is no longer a part of the Underground) it is the least used line on the Underground (as well as the least used sub-surface line).

Contents

[edit] History

The line was a branch of the Metropolitan line until 1988, though in later years it was increasingly operated as a separate line, with the sections not used by the rest of the Metropolitan line (from Hammersmith to Baker Street and from Liverpool Street to Barking) not included on the main Metropolitan line maps. This is also reflected in the line's use of C-stock equipment, as opposed to the A-stock used on the 'main' Metropolitan Line.

The name derives from the Hammersmith and City Railway (H&CR), a 5-km (3-mile) section between Hammersmith (Grove Road) station and Westbourne Park that opened in 1864 and was built and operated jointly by the Metropolitan and Great Western Railways between 1864 and 1868.

Because the changeover is relatively recent, there are many stations on the line with permanent tiles and metal maps that still state that the Metropolitan Line runs there (for example, Bromley-by-Bow station with the District Line); the Hammersmith and City Line taking over many parts of the Metropolitan Line has confined it to the north-west, resulting in it having no interchange with the District Line.

[edit] Trains

All Hammersmith & City line trains are in the distinctive London Underground livery of red, white and blue and are formed of C stock. The line shares trains with the Circle and District (Wimbledon-Edgware Road branch) lines.

[edit] Map

Geographically accurate path of the Hammersmith & City line

[edit] Stations

in order from west to east

merges with Circle line and the District line

merges with Metropolitan line

separates from Circle and Metropolitan lines, joins District line

[edit] Future plans

The Hammersmith and City line may merge with the Circle Line in 2011 to form a spiral route. The new route would run from Hammersmith to Paddington and then do a complete loop of the current Circle line, terminating at Edgware Road. This would mean fewer delays than the existing orbital route. On the current Circle line one delayed train tends to affect all following trains. Having a terminus at Edgware Road, rather than the orbital route, would avoid this. The Hammersmith & City line's route from Liverpool Street to Barking would be taken over by the Metropolitan Line, forming a new route from Uxbridge to Barking.

This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original content was at Hammersmith & City Line. The list of authors can be seen in the & City Line&action=history page history. As with this London Wiki, the content of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.