LONDON KING'S CROSS RAILWAY STATION

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'King's Cross' station (often spelt 'Kings Cross' or 'Kings X' on platform signs) is a railway station in the district of the same name in northeast central London. It is located in the London Borough of Camden and is the southern terminus of the East Coast Main Line. It is immediately adjacent to the Midland Main Line terminus, St. Pancras station.

Contents
Location and environs
Services
History
Restoration
King's Cross in fiction
Harry Potter
Other fiction
Spelling
Notes
External links

Location and environs


West of King's Cross are, in succession, St. Pancras, the new British Library building, and Euston station, all within a few minutes' walk. The present King's Cross Thameslink station is 5 minutes' walk to the east.
The new London terminus of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link will be within a re-constructed St. Pancras. Eurostar trains are due to arrive there in 2007 with the completion of Stage Two of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link project.
Considerable regeneration effort has gone into the area in recent years, with the opening of new hotels and office space under construction.

Services


The station is served by routes from the north and east of England and Scotland, connecting to major cities such as; Cambridge, Peterborough, Hull, Doncaster, Leeds, York, Newcastle, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Dundee, Aberdeen and Inverness. King's Cross also incorporates the King's Cross St. Pancras Underground station, the biggest and busiest interchange station on the Underground network.
Three train companies run services into the mainline station:

★ 'GNER': inter-city services on the East Coast Main Line to Peterborough, Doncaster, Leeds, York, Darlington, Newcastle, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Dundee, Aberdeen, Inverness, Wakefield.

★ 'First Capital Connect': services to Cambridge and King's Lynn, local services to North London, Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire, Peterborough and Cambridgeshire

★ 'Hull Trains': inter-city services to Hull via the East Coast Main Line
Grand Central plans to operate services on the ECML from King's Cross to Sunderland via Hartlepool from September 2007.
National Express East Coast, the new franchise holder for the ECML franchise, will operate a new Lincoln - London service from this station. This service is due to start 2010. (This service is not to be confused with the new Lincoln - London service starting 2008, run by Stagecoach.)[1]

History


King's Cross was originally designed and built as the London hub of the Great Northern Railway and terminus of the East Coast Main Line. It was designed by Lewis Cubitt and constructed in two years from 1851 to 1852, on the site of a former fever and smallpox hospital. The main part of the station, which today includes platforms 1 to 8, was opened on 14 October 1852. It replaced a temporary terminus at Maiden Lane that had opened on 8 August 1850.
The platforms have been reconfigured several times; originally there was only one arrival and one departure platform (today's platforms 1 and 8 respectively), with the space between used for carriage sidings. In later years as suburban traffic grew, space for additional platforms was added with considerably less grandeur; the secondary building now containing platforms 9-11, including Platform 9 3/4, survives from that era. Since privatisation, express services into the station have been run by Great North Eastern Railway (GNER). The contract was renewed in 2005.
Three GNER InterCity 225s lined up at King's Cross in January 2006.

According to legend, King's Cross is built on the site of Boudica's final battle, or else her body is buried under one of the platforms there. Platforms 8, 9, and 10 have been suggested as possible sites. There are also passages under the station which Boudica's ghost is supposed to haunt.
The King's Cross fire of 1987, in which 31 people died, was at the adjacent King's Cross St. Pancras Underground station. A major redevelopment of this Underground station (partly influenced by the report issued after the fire) is currently in process. Phase One was completed in 2006; Phase Two is expected to be complete by 2011.
The original "King's Cross" was a monument to King George IV.
In 1972, a one-storey extension designed inhouse by British Rail was constructed in front of the station. While the extension was intended to be temporary, more than thirty years later it still stands. Many consider the extension unattractive, not the least because it obscures the Grade I-listed facade of the original station. Prior to the construction of the extension the station facade had already become hidden behind a small terrace of shops. This extension is scheduled to be demolished, revealing once again the full glory of the Lewis Cubitt architecture, when a new ticket hall and concourse area is built on the station's western side.
On 10 September 1973, a IRA bomb exploded in the booking hall at 12.24pm, causing extensive damage and injuring six people, some seriously. The 3lb device was thrown without warning into the station by a youth who escaped into the crowd and was not apprehended.[2]
In days gone by, part of Kings Cross was an intermediate station. On the extreme east of the site was Kings Cross York Road, with suburban trains from Finsbury Park calling here, then going underground using the York Road curve to join the Widened Lines to Farringdon, Barbican and Moorgate. In the other direction, trains from Moorgate came off the Widened Lines via the Hotel Curve, with platform 16 rising to the main line level.

Restoration


This 1852 illustration shows King's Cross without the concourse extension, which is currently scheduled to be removed.

In 2005, a £400m restoration plan was announced by Network Rail, which was approved by the London Borough of Camden in April.[3] Planned is a thorough restoration of the arched roof of the station and the demolition of the 1972 addition, to be replaced by an open-air piazza. A semi-circular concourse (estimated completion date 2012) will be built in the space directly to the west of the station behind the Great Northern Hotel, which will have some outbuildings demolished. It will complement the neighbouring St Pancras Station, and replace the current 1972 concourse, shopping area, and ECML ticket office. The new western concourse will provide improved access to Underground services and direct link to Thameslink. The land between the domestic main lines leading from the two stations will be redeveloped with nearly 2,000 new homes, 486,280 m² of offices, and new roads as King's Cross Central.

King's Cross in fiction


Harry Potter

The Platform 9¾ sign occasionally causes congestion as tourists and Harry Potter fans stop to photograph it or try to push the rest of the luggage trolley through the wall.

King's Cross features in the Harry Potter books, by J. K. Rowling, as the starting point of the Hogwarts Express. The train uses a secret platform 9¾ located by passing through the barrier between platforms 9 and 10.
Unfortunately, platforms 9 and 10 are in a separate building from the main station; also, rather than being adjacent so that a barrier could be between them, they are separated by two intervening tracks. Rowling intended the location to be in the main part of the station, but misremembered the platform numbering. During an interview in 2001, she indicated that she had confused King's Cross with Euston. In fact platforms 9 and 10 at Euston are also separated by two intervening tracks, so either she had yet another station in mind or else she simply did not consider or did not remember the physical arrangement of consecutively numbered platforms there.
When the movies were filmed, the station scenes took place within the main station, with platforms 4 and 5 renumbered 9 and 10. In the ''Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets'' film, the exterior of the adjacent St. Pancras railway station was used, as its Gothic façade was considered more impressive than the real King's Cross. Within King's Cross, a cast-iron "Platform 9¾" sign has been erected on a wall of the station's suburban building containing the real platforms 9 and 10. Part of a luggage trolley has also been installed below the sign; whilst the near end is visible, the rest of the trolley seems to have disappeared into the wall.
"Kings Cross" is the title of the 35th chapter of ''Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows'', where a location resembling the station plays a significant role. The station is also featured in the epilogue of the same book, making it the final setting of the Harry Potter series.
Other fiction


★ The station is mentioned as suggesting "infinity" to Margaret Schlegel and contrasted with the "facile splendours" of St Pancras in Chapter 2 of E.M. Forster's novel Howard's End.

★ The ''Doctor Who'' Virgin New Adventures novel ''Transit'' features King's Cross as one of the main hubs of an interplanetary transit system based on the London Underground.

★ In children's television programmes featuring the puppet Roland Rat, Roland is said to live in the sewers beneath King's Cross. In ''Roland Rat: The Series'' this was realised as the high-tech "Ratcave", accessed from a hidden lift in a workman's shelter.

★ The twelfth and final episode of the anime ''Victorian Romance Emma'' prominently features King's Cross Station in 1885 with great historical accuracy and detail.

★ Some of Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories have the great detective and Dr. Watson travelling by way of King's Cross. The following example is from ''The Adventure of the Missing Three-Quarter'', Watson speaking first:
''"And what have you gained?"

''"A starting-point for our investigation." He hailed a cab. "King's Cross Station," said he.

''"We have a journey, then?"

''"Yes; I think we must run down to Cambridge together. All the indications seem to me to point in that direction."''


★ The station, its surrounding streets and the railway approach feature prominently in scenes from the 1955 Ealing comedy, ''The Ladykillers''.

★ Scenes from the 1995 Bollywood film ''Dilwale Dhulania Le Jayenge'' (DDLJ) were filmed at this station.

★ There is an underground station called King's Cross on the North London System in the novel ''The Horn of Mortal Danger'' (1980). It corresponds to this station rather than the Tube one.

★ In the Rev. W.V. Awdry's Railway Series of children's books Gordon the Big Engine used to work from King's Cross Station.

★ In Eva Ibbotson's childrens book The Secret of Platform 13 there is a door between worlds called a "Gump" under the fictitious and abandoned platform 13.

Spelling


This sign includes an apostrophe

The station name, King's Cross, is seen spelled both with and without an apostrophe:

★ ''King's Cross'' is the signage used in the Network Rail and London Underground stations and on the tube map.

★ The official Network Rail webpage uses the "King's Cross" spelling [1].

★ However, ''Kings Cross'' is used in the National Rail timetable database, as well as on other National Rail railway pages, and the usage is also seen on the Trainline.com online booking system. However other stations such as King's Lynn and Hall i' th' Wood also lack apostrophes, suggesting this is a software limitation.

★ ''Kings X'' or ''London KX'' are abbreviations seen in space-limited contexts.

Notes


1. FROM 'LINCOLN TO LONDON IN JUST TWO HOURS WITH NEW RAIL LINK'
2. BBC On This Day 1973:Bomb blasts rock Central London, Retrieved on 27 February 2007
3. Camden Council planning application 2006/3387/P

External links



Station information on King's Cross railway station from Network Rail.
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King's Cross Central developer

Kings Cross Online

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