Farringdon Station, from Past to Future

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  • Опубліковано 21 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 260

  • @phaasch
    @phaasch 2 роки тому +182

    In a way, that "Grand Central" concept eventually came to fruition, just not in the way it was first imagined. With the opening of the Elizabeth line, Farringdon now is certainly the most pivotal interchange station in London, and will continue to be so.

    • @grahamwhitworth9454
      @grahamwhitworth9454 2 роки тому +31

      Including, shortly, trains to 3 London airports - Heathrow, Gatwick and Luton.

    • @chrisoddy8744
      @chrisoddy8744 2 роки тому +15

      @@grahamwhitworth9454 As well as easy transfers for trains to the other three - one more train from Liv Street to Stansted, from Shenfield to Southend and you could theoretically walk from the Liz to London City if you were committed enough

    • @KasabianFan44
      @KasabianFan44 2 роки тому +11

      Not sure being an interchange between three routes qualifies it as “the grand central” station even in modern terms. By that logic, Oxford Circus and Green Park have been “grand central” for decades.

    • @phaasch
      @phaasch 2 роки тому +18

      @@KasabianFan44 the two you mention are not the meeting point of the two principal cross-London rail routes. It's that which gives it it's strategic importance.

    • @andrewlong6438
      @andrewlong6438 2 роки тому +11

      I used to commute each week from Reading to Huntingdon and back. It was great to get off the Thameslink train from Huntingdon at Farringdon and cross straight across to the Metropolitan line to reach Paddington. With the coming of the Elizabeth Line, I would now be able to change from Thameslink to the Elizabeth Line and soon will be able to travel straight through to Reading without a change at Paddington. So as a major interchange between north/south to east/west it’s going to become even more important!

  • @tramcrazy
    @tramcrazy 2 роки тому +90

    I also tested the secret lift a little while ago to test Geoff Marshall’s infinite loop. It was satisfying to get a train back to where you started without leaving a station.

    • @jonistan9268
      @jonistan9268 2 роки тому +1

      @@JP_TaVeryMuch or you go from Kennington to Kennington, even though most trains go to Battersea Power Station now, also you technically aren't allowed to take that train.

  • @Hollandstation
    @Hollandstation 2 роки тому +37

    I got the secret lift from the Elizabeth Line at Farringdon recently for a video. I find it so crazy that everything is so intergrated there!

    • @kelvinhill9874
      @kelvinhill9874 2 роки тому +3

      My wife and I just had a holiday in London during July to visit our girls. They live in the Barbican estate area and so we wound up using both the Barbican and Farringdon stations almost daily. We were shown and used the lift by the staff at the new Farringdon entrance just down the street from Barbican. Although we only wound up using it once. FYI. We’re Australian.

  • @Boabywankenobi
    @Boabywankenobi Рік тому +6

    Farringdon changed my entire commute and saved me 30 mins each way. I used to go thr Northern Line from High Barnet Waterloo, then across the Jubilee to Canary Wharf. Now the journey is New Barnet to Farringdon and then on the Elizabeth Line to Canary Wharf. Complete game-changer.

  • @recklessroges
    @recklessroges 2 роки тому +1

    I don't think that I had ever used Farringdon station until this year. My first Elizabeth line journey terminated there and it was the nicest London Underground journey of my life.

    • @leylandlynxvlog
      @leylandlynxvlog 4 місяці тому

      I was trying to remember why I ended up at Farringdon, and I think that was why - Elizabeth Line from near Ilford - but I could be wrong. I'd have to check my Google Maps history. It's quite a lovely station, less confusing than London Bridge and less vast than Waterloo, or so I recall.

  • @rzholland
    @rzholland 2 роки тому +43

    You were quite correct about the building of the first Farringdon Station, I was at the meeting in 1862 that planned it all [told you I was old] and it was built out of timber as it was known that it would have to be moved, due mainly to the fact that Charles Pearson owned the land that the second, more substantial station would be built on. In fact the first station was built from the cheapest timber available, some of which is still propping my shed up.

    • @feeshyman
      @feeshyman Рік тому

      You are not 160 years old 😂

    • @theexcaliburone5933
      @theexcaliburone5933 Рік тому

      @@feeshymanwhy would he lie?

    • @feeshyman
      @feeshyman Рік тому

      @@theexcaliburone5933 i don't know. maybe people do that these days 🤣

    • @kiwitrainguy
      @kiwitrainguy 25 днів тому

      @@feeshyman Actually if he was only 20 years old in 1862 he would be 180 when he wrote that comment.😉😄

  • @Ozymandi_as
    @Ozymandi_as 2 роки тому +14

    When I first used Farringdon in the 1980s, it was to have lunch with a friend who was working at the offices of The Guardian, which at that time were on Farringdon Road. Otherwise, there was little reason for me to ever use this lesser stopping place on the Circle Line, although it was clear that the station shed had been built to accommodate more lines and traffic. I was reminded of the revival and enhancement of its status only a fortnight ago when I changed there from the Elizabeth Line to Thameslink, traveling from Woolwich to Herne Hill, on what would, only recently, have been a much lengthier and more convoluted journey. Moving from the vast, purlescent cavities of the new subterranean railway, to the old narrow platforms above, with tracks winding off into the weathered brick tunnel entrances, I wondered about the station's history Now I know a lot more than I did then! London's tangled railway network is like a palimpsest - scratch away at the modern diagram, and a quite different one is revealed underneath. How can one man have gained mastery over so many of its mysteries, and hold down a day-job? Are you a wizzard, Mr Hazzard?

  • @GeorgeChoy
    @GeorgeChoy 2 роки тому +1

    Great Sunday evening entertainment, thanks.

  • @neilbain8736
    @neilbain8736 2 роки тому +3

    Snow Hill Tunnel. I immediately thought of Birmingham.
    It'll also be a good one to remember in a round of Mornington Crescent. I once played Charing Cross and got stuck at Coatbridge Sunnyside for being a smart arse; served me right, too.

  • @jayfielding1333
    @jayfielding1333 2 роки тому

    Farringdon never gets the recognition it deserves. Thank you for this video.

  • @PineappleSkip
    @PineappleSkip 2 роки тому +7

    Wow! Love the high speed cooks tour of the history of Farringdon. Only got confused when Snow Hill appeared on the map and I thought momentarily that I’d caught HS2 to Birmingham. Luckily the high speed commentary clarified all that.

  • @Pesmog
    @Pesmog 2 роки тому +11

    Farringdon is now more important than it has ever been before. It has grown slowly become a key interchange.

  • @PoloABD
    @PoloABD 2 роки тому +2

    I love Farringdon; the deep sense of history and nostalgia I get standing in front of it never passes me by.
    My favourite station.
    Thanks Jago.

  • @grahamdeamer128
    @grahamdeamer128 2 роки тому +27

    Very interesting, thanks.
    Topical footnote (for me anyway) I visited this area for the first time just a few weeks ago. I was puzzled when I couldn't find a Farringdon "Street" station. My late father (a Londonder whose parent's families both had roots in the immediate area) regularly referred to the station as such. Clearly the original name indelibly stuck with the "locals"!

    • @1258-Eckhart
      @1258-Eckhart 2 роки тому +4

      And the next station on the line, Barbican, used to be called "Aldersgate Street". John Betjeman wrote a poem to its passing, entitled "Monody on the Death of Aldersgate Street Station".

    • @hx0d
      @hx0d 2 роки тому +1

      I live nearby and I do sometimes call it Farringdon Street... even though I'm quite young haha, but maybe that's my local knowledge coming through.

  • @ulazygit
    @ulazygit 2 роки тому +3

    Love it! Farringdon was the station I used when travelling to my first job and career. I works at 12 Farringdon Road/Cardinal House. My office was on the fourth floor overlooking Farringdon station. During the late 80’s, the old engineering building (20 Farringdon Road) was demolished, brick by brick. I was fascinated watching The old London bricks, crittal windows, and the worlds largest elevator being carefully removed, craned out, to be reused/re-cycled. I watched when the River Fleet flooded the building site (obviously nothing learned!) and the frantic call for remedial works to re-contain the underground river. Cowcross street at that time was ‘vehicularised’ and I would drive past the station to the car park entrance to Cardinal House. So much has changed in what is a blink of an eye in this station’s lifetime!

  • @SoiBuakhaoRoutemasterbus
    @SoiBuakhaoRoutemasterbus 2 роки тому +3

    Another great vid Mr J...... So here's another quirky fact to go with it!.... Farringdon was one of the places where there was a connection between British rail and the London Underground. The single line connection was a trailing link from the inner Circle just beyond the Westbound Starter to the UP Mooorgate on the Widened Lines. The only regular traffic that i personally know that used it was the stock transfers to & from the Northern City Line at Drayton Park. Once the usual route via the Northern Heights was closed, they were hauled from Drayton Park onto the Great Northern lines and then through York Road/Hotel Curve to Farringdon and then back on to LT tracks for the run to Neasden, the Northern City being part of the Met rather than the Northern Line.......

  • @djsmeguk
    @djsmeguk 2 роки тому +6

    Farringdon is where Thameslink switches from ohle to third rail and back again. It was always fun on first gen Thameslink trains to watch the pantograph get popped out there, or retracted.

    • @jeremybuck1818
      @jeremybuck1818 2 роки тому

      I think going northbound, the change is now done at City Thameslink?

  • @Duececoupe
    @Duececoupe 2 роки тому +9

    I like those green mosaic walls! 😍🥰
    Who doesn't love old architecture!?
    I can't help but feeling that modern architecture (most of the time anyway), have less life, soul in it, than you find in a morgue....
    Keep them videos coming uncle Jago! 🤜🏻🤛🏻🍻

    • @hx0d
      @hx0d 2 роки тому

      Not true, especially here. Both perfectly complement each other

  • @eattherich9215
    @eattherich9215 2 роки тому +5

    Morning Jago. Let's all settle down to another fascinating video.

  • @dougie1968
    @dougie1968 2 роки тому +1

    I go to St Jame's Church at Sekforde Street, Clerkenwell, every Sunday or whenever there's a church event. So naturally Farringdon station is where I get off. I love the station and Clerkenwell. The area has an amazing history. One thing I discovered is Lenin and Stalin used to frequent a pub called the Crown Tavern, which is several doors down from the church, no doubt to discuss communism, the revolution etc. Their favourite table was underneath an old clock, which eventually got given the nickname, the Conspirators Clock. It's incredible to think the birth of communism started in a pub in Clerkenwell!

  • @gracewenzel
    @gracewenzel 2 роки тому +7

    I love those clever little architectural details in the new station entrances!

  • @brianfretwell3886
    @brianfretwell3886 2 роки тому +13

    I had forgotten how close this is to the river Fleet. I worked in Cardinal House from the 1970's to 1992, which was on the site of the Elizabeth line station. One day when there was very heavy rain not only were the streets flooding from the wash down from Mt Pleasant but our car park (which was at the same level as the trackbed of the Widened Lines flooded because the manhole covers were pushed up by the force of water from the sewer below (not clean water). As a telecoms building it had standby generators there so there was a rush to sandbag around their room.
    The widened lines flooded almost to the top of the tunnel where they dived under the underground tracks (We coul
    s see this clearly from our canteen which on a high floor)l the and were out of service for weeks if not months. I suspect fear of this happening again is why when it was made into Thameslink they used slabbed track along that route.

    • @phaasch
      @phaasch 2 роки тому

      The Widened Lines have always been prone to floods. I recall seeing photographs from c.1899-1900 of inundations at the same point, with steam powered pumping apparatus in operation.

    • @SportyMabamba
      @SportyMabamba 2 роки тому +1

      Farringdon station is built over a ghost river, so when there’s heavy rain the water finds its old course and floods the track in the platform area

    • @hx0d
      @hx0d 2 роки тому

      Also the reason why the two bridges at Holborn Viaduct and Rosebery Ave/Warner Street exist..

  • @Rog5446
    @Rog5446 2 роки тому +9

    I remember GWR pannier tanks trundling through from Paddington onto the widened lines, and I expect many of my age remember LNER tanks trundling in the opposite direction from Moorgate to Kings Cross.

    • @phaasch
      @phaasch 2 роки тому +3

      "Snow falls in the buffet of Aldersgate station, Toiling and doomed from Moorgate Street puffs the train". Soot and snow. So redolent of '62-63.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 2 роки тому

      Would those pannier tanks be the London Transport Met ones used mainly for rubbish ?

    • @ianpegge9967
      @ianpegge9967 2 роки тому +1

      @@highpath4776 most likely heading for the former GWR goods depot at Smithfield

    • @Rog5446
      @Rog5446 2 роки тому +1

      @@highpath4776 No, they were Goodies going across London.

    • @jeremybuck1818
      @jeremybuck1818 2 роки тому +1

      @@phaasch The words of the poem are on a wall in Barbican station booking hall...

  • @SamanthaWritesThings
    @SamanthaWritesThings 2 роки тому +2

    Such a satisfying train sound at the end!

  • @jonstout9236
    @jonstout9236 2 роки тому +13

    Hello Jago, and thanks for your videos! On this one, I do have some information... the largely red and cream building adjacent to the station was the main office of Smith Newcourt, stock brokers. I was once given a tour of their new trading facilities and technology. During this tour, our host explained that the entire building is encased in a military grade faraday cage to protect their trading systems from electrical interference where the trains were using a combination overhead lines and rails for power. Money no object for the traders in those days!

    • @PhilipStorry
      @PhilipStorry 2 роки тому +6

      Poor folks. If the Faraday Cage is still there they'll need a whole repeater infrastructure inside to get a mobile phone signal! (They had the same problem in some buildings in the City...)

  • @OutpostH
    @OutpostH Місяць тому

    I live in in Long Eaton, that has the Sheffield>King Cross/St Pancras express EMR train pass through. I use LHR airport a lot for my job, and Farringdon is the hub I use to get me there. I get on the tube at Kings Cross for one stop to get off at Farringdon. I then climb the stairs and jump tracks to er... Farringdon (Elizabeth Line), Then straight to LHR T2. No Paddington Express needed. On return, I use Thames Link at Farringdon to get me back to Kings Cross/St Pancras. What a diverse and useful station 🙂

  • @JBLewis
    @JBLewis 2 роки тому +2

    We are wrapping up 9 days staying just around the corner from Barbican station, and most days we've taken the Elizabeth line. The "sneak" from Barbican into Farringdon has been quite useful. But this video has reminded me that we never managed to actually visit Farringdon station proper!
    Since we plan on being on the first Elizabeth line train over to Paddington in the morning, I'm afraid it's not going to happen this trip.
    Next time, for sure!
    Jago, thanks for all the great videos! We felt like we were up to speed with the underground so much quicker!

  • @hx0d
    @hx0d 2 роки тому +2

    Yay, a video about my nearest and favourite station in London!! A great area too ;) Top job, especially on this video. Cheers to more.

  • @likklej8
    @likklej8 2 роки тому +2

    I worked at Hohner’s Musical Instrument’s in 1970/1 and Farringdon was my station when working there. I used the Greenwich Railway getting off at Westcombe Park. Thanks good helpful railway information as usual

  • @iamlinxx_
    @iamlinxx_ 2 роки тому +3

    Imagine if he had pulled it off and London had gotten a Grand Central station where all mainline and underground lines meet. Travelling into London bridge to have to walk across the river to go to Fenchurch St or Cannon Street or Liverpool St can be such a pain. Equally travelling on a train and u can see another line across the river but they don't connect can be so frustrating.

  • @grahambaker7563
    @grahambaker7563 Рік тому

    Always a pleasure watching your videos, Jago!!

  • @glynwelshkarelian3489
    @glynwelshkarelian3489 2 роки тому +2

    The etching at 03.09 of the Fleet shows the back of Saffron Hill, which once grew crocuses, and is where Charles Dickens' Fagin's den, from Oliver Twist, would have been if it had been real; but it was real enough. The Fleet was famous for many dead dogs and more than enough dead humans.
    I am travelling through London to Chilworth, very soon. I'm going to drink in The Betsey Trotwood, The Horseshoe, & The Jerusalem, all near this station. I've done shows in them all. I now wonder if I should travel to Guildford via the Cross-Liz-Purple Line to Reading: instead of Chilworth via Redhill?

  • @adrianrutterford762
    @adrianrutterford762 2 роки тому +2

    Wonderful as ever.
    Thanks Mr H

  • @Leonard_Smith
    @Leonard_Smith 2 роки тому

    Worth watching to the very end just for the alliteration Jago 👍

  • @brian9731
    @brian9731 2 роки тому +1

    I live at Canons Park on the Jubilee Line and we're waiting for the fully linked up Bond Street to open and for the Elizabeth Line to link all the way through. This will mean we can get to Heathrow with one change at Bond Street and also Gatwick with an easy change at Bond Street and another easy change at Farringdon. All we'll need then will be a lift at Canons Park instead of the 48 steps to climb with luggage.

  • @DavidFraser007
    @DavidFraser007 2 роки тому +1

    I worked not 3 minutes from Farringdon Station, just up Cowcross Street. If I times it well, I could be home in Kentish Town within 15 minutes of leaving the office. Lots of interesting things to see around Farringdon Station.

  • @WolfmanWoody
    @WolfmanWoody 2 роки тому

    It's amazing when seeing that end clip and when you travel on the railways and underground just how much land lies wasted.
    Only ever got off a Farringdon once and that was to go to Hatton Garden.

  • @mikkoistanbul1322
    @mikkoistanbul1322 Рік тому

    In the Farringdon episode you mentioned you will be covering more about Snow Hill tunnel. Am looking forward to that!

  • @ReubenAshwell
    @ReubenAshwell 2 роки тому +3

    Brilliant video, I've passed through Farrington a number of times and it's a nice station I must admit, a bit difficult to film both Thameslink and tube at the same time though.

  • @solarsapphire7528
    @solarsapphire7528 2 роки тому +3

    One of the things that's always intrigued me about Farringdon is that the Thameslink platforms have Underground roundels on them. I can't think of anywhere else where that's the case off the top of my head.

    • @grumpyoldman47
      @grumpyoldman47 2 роки тому +1

      Don't know when ownership changed, but if you look at photos of Farringdon in the 1960s it is signalled as part of the Underground, and there was a connection between the current Underground lines and the Widened Lines to the west of Farringdon station; there was still a meat train from Birkenhead to Smithfield which used the connection in the mid-1960s (hauled by a condensing pannier tank over the Met east of Paddington). This may be the reason for the roundels

  • @isashax
    @isashax 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks for another very informative video. I have gone through Farringdon a lot but haven't stopped there much!

  • @apolloc.vermouth5672
    @apolloc.vermouth5672 2 роки тому +5

    9:24 Wonderfully composed shot - not unlike a promo for the Metropolitan Line made by Theo Angelopoulos!

    • @bryan3550
      @bryan3550 2 роки тому +1

      An amazing vision! 🧐

    • @whyyoulidl
      @whyyoulidl 2 роки тому

      Theo Angelopoulos - was that one of Lenny Henry's characters?

    • @apolloc.vermouth5672
      @apolloc.vermouth5672 2 роки тому +1

      @@whyyoulidl Yep, that's the guy - bet you didn't know he had a side career in arthouse cinema

  • @caw25sha
    @caw25sha 2 роки тому +5

    About 20 years ago I worked for a short time in a building right next to the station. Despite its very central location it felt like a no mans land between the City and West End. The area now seems to be in the very early stages of a resurgence like, for example, the Kings Cross area. The completion of the Museum of London (which they seem to have been working on since time immemorial) could even set the area buzzing.

    • @hx0d
      @hx0d 2 роки тому +1

      Still does - on Saturdays and Sundays. A lot of the buildings are residential, and as a local, noise is big here during the week!! I think it being quiet and "a no-mans" land helps preserve its charm with the history rather than having endless tourists come through...

    • @tonym3309
      @tonym3309 2 роки тому +1

      @@hx0d Totally agree, a calm oasis right up to Clerkenwell presently during weekends. Unfortunately Covent Garden mark2 beckons.

    • @tonym3309
      @tonym3309 2 роки тому +1

      @@hx0d Totally agree, a calm oasis right up to Clerkenwell presently during weekends. Unfortunately Covent Garden mark2 beckons.

  • @brettpalfrey4665
    @brettpalfrey4665 2 роки тому +1

    Blimey! a lot more to Farringdon than I realised! Thanks Jago!

  • @wayneavrili2463
    @wayneavrili2463 2 роки тому

    Great work mr hazard fascinating as always and very well presented

  • @lindsayheyes925
    @lindsayheyes925 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks for this. My g-grandfather was born nearby, and this station was one of the great infrastructure developments which improved his father's life - with the end of The Bloody Code of justice, the closure of Smithfield Cattle Market, the opening of Smithfield Meat Market, closure of Newgate Meat Market and the Warwick Lane Mutton Market, the rebuild of Newgate Prison and Old Bailey, the end of Transportation, building of Bazalgette's sewers, and street lighting. The pace of change in that area in Victorian times was incredible.
    Q. Can you do something on how country-killed meat was transported to the Metropolitan Meat Market? Apparently there were rails in Cheapside and Warwick Lane for horse-drawn wagons, but what was the extent of the network, how long did it last, who ran it, and how did it tie in with the cattle-drive along Giltspur Street?

  • @Skorpychan
    @Skorpychan 2 роки тому

    Those track noises on the end. So nice to hear those again. I know that welded track is better in every way, but it just doesn't sound the way my childhood memories say trains should, the way that platform at Farringdon did.

  • @ESquirez
    @ESquirez 2 роки тому +1

    Another Fantastic tail. Well done @jago hazzard 👏🏿

  • @Albanwinter
    @Albanwinter 2 роки тому +2

    So another all night, can't sleep and then...Oh look! Jago's just posted! Yay. Trains sure beat the strange and unusual missing persons cases I was binging on. LOL

  • @timsully8958
    @timsully8958 2 роки тому

    I always have a little smile to myself when I am on the Met/Circ/H&C en route somewhere (often Euston Square to go to Holyhead) as it means passing through Barbican and Farringdon. It reminds me of journeys I took from Turnpike Lane (and later Finsbury Park) with my father to get to The Valley to watch Charlton (change at Liv St, district to Bromley by Bow, 108 bus to Charlton). I found both stations most endearing and almost ‘cute’ for some reason. They certainly didn’t look to my 8 year old eyes like ‘normal’ underground stations. There were two ruddy great disused platforms at each for starters!
    It was a visit to the LTMuseum that brought on a whole new fascination and explained the significance of Farringdon and the other pioneering stations. Yet of course, this significant station (its 1977 remember!) looked a little forlorn and neglected 🤔
    Then of course things changed but it is strange how the two little stations that I always associated together suddenly became became much more significant with the arrival of Thameslink, both stations verily bustling if one were to go through near rush hour. Strange then that now of course, the two have become very different. Barbican has almost reverted back to character, small almost sleepy and just another stop in the sub-surface loop, whereas Farringdon has gone one to become ever more significant! 😮
    It still seems a bit surreal that the once rather sad and tatty looking ‘tick’ is now a major ‘blue access circle’ interchange on the map, with regular trains taking commuters north and south, east and west on their way home, allowing an interchange for any that need to pass through and change direction. And if you’re off on holiday, there’s easy interchange for airports or even a dirty weekend in Brighton. Plus of course, you can still get the sub-surface to Euston Square and onto Holyhead…I mean what’s not to like? 🤷🏻‍♂️
    So it’s sad for Barbican but Farringdon has now become infinitely more important than 8 year old Timmy could have imagined it would. The only sad thing for me is that during construction, there was a small temporary museum space in one of the concessions of the old station building next to the entrance. It offered a potted history of the line, the station’s historical significance and a few interesting artefacts, along with a snazzy set of commemorative post cards. I know it’s a money thing, but I really rather think TFL missed a trick by closing it. The Metroplitan Museum would have a nice ring to it 🤔
    Cheers old boy. Really love how you manage to continue to highlight some of my favourite stations 🤓 Cin-cin 🥂🍀👍

  • @badatfootball4698
    @badatfootball4698 2 роки тому

    I love Farringdon Station. Very under-rated and so glad you gave it the recognition it derserves. Always a lot going on with the different lines in view from the top of the stairs looking down. Used to get off here almost every week in the mid-80s to go to a training college at Smithfield just round the corner. Happy days.

  • @dodgydruid
    @dodgydruid 2 роки тому +2

    My late father started his signalling journey at North Kent Jnc which was incidentally where the very first policemen acted as signalman on a railway anywhere around the world, only remnant is the old concrete plinth and if you consider the night of the St Johns disaster and my old man, he ran from North Kent Jnc all the way down to St Johns, one of the first railwaymen to arrive aside the signalmen and platform staff from St Johns and Lewisham. When he was at London Bridge, he was part of the S&T fact finding crew that went under Snow Hill to work out the absolute blocks, MR to SR interfaces, passing of electronic tokens to London Bridge and Victoria power boxes and he was there when the exploratory excavators accidentally pulled the side out of one of Newgate Prison's charnel pits with worries about plague going round the team and they all had to go to St Barts to have their hands held and told no plaguey today matey whilst consultants barely hid their mirth hehe He was deemed essential as he was passed out still for the old Loughborough Junction box which he worked on occasion as E grade and he sat there over many evenings looking at the pre-closure workings of the Snow Hill link and how they fitted in with normal Holborn Viaduct traffic to and from.

  • @pullformore
    @pullformore 2 роки тому

    Absolutely fascinating, thank you. Love your work.

  • @dorsettyke
    @dorsettyke 2 роки тому +1

    A very interesting video as per!
    Thank you 👍

  • @robinjones6999
    @robinjones6999 2 роки тому +1

    The last shot of the Thames link train at Farringdon demonstrates perfectly a broken rail repair with a fish plate and not welded. IMO

  • @ianhiggon-caswell4225
    @ianhiggon-caswell4225 2 роки тому

    Another very interesting video jago as I live in south wales i find the history gteat thanks

  • @boogalaloopala2738
    @boogalaloopala2738 Рік тому

    Love that drum beat at 9:11

  • @alanbudgen2672
    @alanbudgen2672 2 роки тому

    What a challenge to build a model of Farringdon in Victorian times! I think you are correct that things may change again. The Museum of London will move to Smithfield in 2027, and the market will eventually close and probably become an area similar to Convent Garden or Spitalfields. So who knows? The tracks will also be on view inside the new museum.

  • @teecefamilykent
    @teecefamilykent 2 роки тому

    Brilliant video sir!!!!

  • @dodgydruid
    @dodgydruid 2 роки тому +1

    There are 2 truncated lines still to use that used to be another LT spur but on Google Maps they just stop short of the Snow Hill link but there is a ton of trackbed just waiting for someone to build over something new :D

  • @fsr170409
    @fsr170409 2 роки тому

    Thanks for another great informative video. I hope you do a piece on the widened lines, which is very interesting ,latterly worked by class 31/4 locos with BR suburban coaches.

  • @barbaralamson7450
    @barbaralamson7450 2 роки тому

    Excellent.

  • @richardmellish2371
    @richardmellish2371 2 роки тому +1

    According to Joe Brown's London Railway Atlas, the original station was slightly west and slightly south of the present station, not slightly east. I don't know who's right.

  • @tucker9162
    @tucker9162 2 роки тому

    Claim to fame on a Jago video - at 4:00 the grey container (with Air con on the back) is an FTN Core Node (telecoms) - I tested that one, and have installed and tested extra equipment in it.

  • @apuldram
    @apuldram 2 роки тому +8

    I was working for British Rail when Thameslink was being developed and implemented. Just at Red Star parcels, but there was lots of talk about a new Central London integrated station. Trains from Southampton to Newcastle, Dover to Liverpool… Never in the plans, but ideas sometimes don’t die easily. Does anyone actually catch a Thameslink train from Horsham to Peterborough?

    • @tomwatts703
      @tomwatts703 2 роки тому +6

      I'd be surprised if many people took the whole journey, but I'd also argue it's more about the rapid interchange with trains to Bedford, Cambridge, Brighton etc within the core section - Horsham being more like a handy place for the trains to terminate rather than a hot-button destination for ECML commuters.

    • @qwertyTRiG
      @qwertyTRiG 2 роки тому +3

      I used to have family in both Bedford and Brighton, so I've used that route on Thameslink a few times. They had a special cheep ticket which worked only on their trains.

    • @ReubenAshwell
      @ReubenAshwell 2 роки тому +1

      Horsham to Peterborough? That's the one always getting cancelled isn't it?

    • @AtheistOrphan
      @AtheistOrphan 2 роки тому +4

      @@ReubenAshwell - It didn’t make it to Horsham last time I was on it, breaking down at Three Bridges.

    • @AtheistOrphan
      @AtheistOrphan 2 роки тому +1

      @@tomwatts703 - It’s certainly a hot button destination for me, as my flat overlooks Horsham station!

  • @DzogChen2
    @DzogChen2 2 роки тому

    Hi Jago, The entrance opposite the old Metropolitan line was not constructed as part of the Elizabeth Line/Crossrail project as you implied in the video, but has been there for a few years now, and was built to funnel passengers down onto the Thameslink platforms when that was linked up. Obviously some more work had to be done on it as it was an access point to Crossrail, but that is not the reason for its existence!

  • @seanbonella
    @seanbonella Рік тому

    great video as always......

  • @MrGreatplum
    @MrGreatplum 2 роки тому

    I bet the members of the “royal commission on railway termini” were a great laugh! 😜

  • @juliansadler6263
    @juliansadler6263 2 роки тому +1

    Farringdon used to be so simple. Off Thameslink two steps up onto the Circle Line. Seems to be getting rather more complicated nowadays.

  • @LocoMotive142
    @LocoMotive142 2 роки тому

    I adore Farringdon. A hub that, if everything gets digitised through it, would see in its busiest periods (if it all goes right!) 32 trains per hour on the Underground in each direction, 24 Thameslink trains in each direction, and 24 Elizabeth line trains in each direction, up to a whopping 160 trains in a peak hour from just six platforms.
    It is beautiful, but like the shiny things from Hatton Garden, it is like fragile glass. Break Farringdon, you break London and the South East’s railways. And then it will smell like Smithfield’s.

  • @calmeilles
    @calmeilles 2 роки тому +2

    Farringdon is not in the City of London; which was rather the point as the first lines stopped short of entering the City boundary only 100m further south..

  • @1258-Eckhart
    @1258-Eckhart 2 роки тому +1

    Indeed, Farringdon is well worth a review of its own. From here. you can get collectively further north, south, east and west than from any other station in London. If you include one single same platform change in the peaceful, bucolic countryside, you have hundreds of potential destinations.

    • @iankemp1131
      @iankemp1131 2 роки тому

      Very interesting point. Are you thinking of one particular station or several for the change? I can think of a few, but some don't exactly count as bucolic countryside - airports ((Gatwick) or towns (Peterborough, Cambridge, Stevenage, Bedford, Slough, East Croydon, Haywards Heath etc) and of course not all these changes are same-platform.

    • @1258-Eckhart
      @1258-Eckhart 2 роки тому

      @@iankemp1131 I'm thinking of the smaller intermediate stations in the Green Belt where you can change onto the likes of GWR, Chiltern, East Midlands, Greater Anglia, SWR, etc.

  • @ShedTV
    @ShedTV 2 роки тому +1

    River Fleet pops up again. Perhaps it deserves its own video...

  • @mickeydodds1
    @mickeydodds1 2 роки тому +1

    Actually, "Farringdon" is a village in Oxfordshire - there never was a London district named Farringdon, only a 'Farringdon Street', in the same way as London has an Oxford Street.
    However, there was a tendency for London districts to be named after main railway stations, eg, Victoria, Waterloo etc, so in an odd way, the railway took its name from a street and lent it to a whole neighbourhood.

    • @markcf83
      @markcf83 2 роки тому

      You're thinking of Faringdon.

    • @jeremybuck1818
      @jeremybuck1818 2 роки тому

      Yes, there was a campaign some years back to get the station renamed 'Clerkenwell'. It was unsuccessful...

    • @kevinrkinsella
      @kevinrkinsella 2 роки тому

      Faringdon is an historic market town in west Oxfordshire. No known connection to its misspelled “cousin”.

  • @seprishere
    @seprishere Рік тому

    Technically Farringdon isn’t in the City (except for the eastern exit from the Elizabeth line), as the City stops at Charterhouse Street and Farringdon is north of that.

  • @davidgrant8824
    @davidgrant8824 2 роки тому

    One of the Elizabeth Line's best interchanges. That with the Thameslink. Back of up Thameslink also has good interchange up three steps with Met/ Ham City/Circle westbound. Was origanally Broad Gauge.

  • @jgodfrey546
    @jgodfrey546 2 роки тому +3

    An interesting video on 1 of the system's more interesting stations IMO, at least at platform level...

  • @atgordon1948
    @atgordon1948 2 роки тому

    You never did get back to the closed tunnel ... great video all the same.

  • @neilh990
    @neilh990 2 роки тому

    I enjoyed this one, often use thameslink to get up and see shows. when city thameslink closes (eg a late finish at the theatre) I usually go there and with the Lizzy line connection its even better to get somewhere like Tottenham Court Road

  • @FatManTap
    @FatManTap 2 роки тому

    I love the ‘London Hauptbahnhof’ concept suggested recently by Gareth Dennis, which would see Farringdon become the centre of a through-running High Speed link across the city. He proposed a new station under Smithfield market as the only stop on a new section of line splitting off from HS2 just before Euston, running under central London to Farringdon, then on to join HS1 on the way into Stratford International. This would not only allow international services like Manchester to Paris to run direct, but also do so in a way that uses the domestic network far more efficiently than the current setup or the suggested HS2 to HS1 via Stratford services. If it ever materialises, it would be hard to look past Farringdon as the focal point of the whole London network. Here’s hoping

    • @iankemp1131
      @iankemp1131 2 роки тому

      Certainly an intriguing idea. A couple of snags; passport checks for international trains (would need to be either on-train or at multiple destinations), and HS1 doesn't actually serve many sizeable locations, which is why the Southeastern routes were rather lacklustre until the Javelins came along.

    • @FatManTap
      @FatManTap 2 роки тому

      @@iankemp1131 the political situation is a major obstacle, I agree, since a hypothetical Manchester-London-Paris service would need passport checks for some and not others. It wouldn’t be feasible to consider it for at least a generation or two until there’s a significant change in political will whereby the UK essentially joins Schengen (hardly imminent given the current climate). As you say, not worth it if it’s just to get direct services from Birmingham through to Margate.

    • @grumpyoldman47
      @grumpyoldman47 2 роки тому

      Passport checks can be done easily. but the main problem is the security checks required for operation through the Channel Tunnel; if I remember correctly, the need for these is comprised within the Channel Tunnel Act (and perhaps even the Treaty of Canterbury), so there would certainly need to be legislative changes and perhaps even alterations to an international treaty for this "simple" idea to be taken forward

  • @chrisa8326
    @chrisa8326 2 роки тому +4

    What is this strange blue LED light on the edge of the platform after the train is leaving (0:33)?
    Oh and I almost forgot: A great video - as always. 🙂

    • @gvfc
      @gvfc 2 роки тому +4

      Having commuted to Farringdon many times, I believe they serve as an extra warning to "mind the gap". The platform is curved, and the gap between train and platform is a bit wider in some parts. Hopefully that's the right answer.

    • @worstuserever
      @worstuserever 2 роки тому +1

      @@gvfc I use Farringdon regularly for work and wondered about these lights. Prompted by this question I asked a staff member just now and was informed they are indeed a gap warning.

    • @gvfc
      @gvfc 2 роки тому

      @@worstuserever thank you!

  • @graham3281
    @graham3281 Рік тому

    In the last shot what are the abandoned lines that go off to the right? Or have I missed a video in this? Thanks for a brilliant series

  • @NicholasThompson1982
    @NicholasThompson1982 2 роки тому

    As always, absolutely fascinating!
    Although I am left with the image of your terracotta tiled "frontage"... Thanks.... ;)

  • @___spiritofadventure___
    @___spiritofadventure___ 9 місяців тому

    Such a big gap between Kings X and Farringdon. I advocate for a station at Mt Pleasant.

  • @macchinaverdi
    @macchinaverdi 2 роки тому

    Did you come back to that cut of junction is it being used by Elizabeth line ?

  • @mattmclafferty6265
    @mattmclafferty6265 2 роки тому

    Gauranga.
    Cheers Mate 🙂🙃

  • @michielboland628
    @michielboland628 2 роки тому

    Was in London a few months back, and I thought the thameslink platform looked decidedly grim and boring. (I guess I was roughly at where you were around 09:00 in the video.) But then after walking past a column the whole surrounding suddenly opened up and it looked more like the rest of the video. I thought it was somewhat magical.

  • @roboftherock
    @roboftherock 2 роки тому

    '… despite its age, its story still has a long way to go.' I wonder how many of us hearing that (incl Mr JH) will be around then.

  • @john_critchley
    @john_critchley 2 роки тому +1

    So what's going to happen to the old top train way between Farringdon to Moorgate via Barbican? I always thought it would be an idea to put travelator and shops/cafés in it...

    • @jeremybuck1818
      @jeremybuck1818 2 роки тому

      I believe a long term plan is to use it for stabling Met line trains overnight...

  • @EdgyNumber1
    @EdgyNumber1 2 роки тому

    9:29 Can anyone tell me what the building is with the stairwell haphazardly tacked on the side of that building is? It looks crazy! I wonder what the story is there? Also, are those the Snowhill tunnels?

  • @PadisherCreel
    @PadisherCreel 2 роки тому +1

    The station is in Islington, not City of London. Pubs in the City had different opening hours, so was easy to know if you were in or out of the City!
    In the 80s in a different life, I lived/worked in Cowcross St (building visible at ca 4mins) so witnessed the Thameslink opening.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 2 роки тому +1

      The smithfield pubs had even more differing hours, is the other side of Farringdon Road in Camden now ?

    • @hx0d
      @hx0d 2 роки тому +1

      Some of it is in Camden too

    • @hx0d
      @hx0d 2 роки тому +1

      @@highpath4776 Yes

    • @PadisherCreel
      @PadisherCreel 2 роки тому

      @@hx0d much bigger than when I knew it. Thanks for the info

  • @mikeuk4130
    @mikeuk4130 2 роки тому

    Fascinating stuff. The scene from around 9:23 to 9:38 is rather intriguing - what is that location, please?

  • @abzzeus
    @abzzeus 2 роки тому +1

    what are the abandoned tunnels on the right in the end sequence? I think you've done a video on these?

    • @whyyoulidl
      @whyyoulidl 2 роки тому +1

      Glad u asked; I had the same question...

    • @jackmartinleith
      @jackmartinleith 2 роки тому

      Part of the former Widened Lines from Kings Cross to Moorgate. Closed in 2009 when Farringdon Thameslink platforms were extended. Lots of info on Wikipedia entry for Widened Lines.

  • @hughs591
    @hughs591 2 роки тому

    Once again really interesting, I used to hate commuting through Farringdon in the ‘70’s, it was scruffy and cold with smoky DMUs stopping there. The transformation is dramatic. I did note that, after it’s mention, you didn’t return to the Snow Hill tunnel but I presume it’s now once again used by Crossrail ?

  • @myvans4
    @myvans4 2 роки тому

    Have you done a video on The Strand station in Surrey Street? Interesting red brick façade, closed.

    • @jackmartinleith
      @jackmartinleith 2 роки тому

      Strand station was renamed Aldwych in 1915. Former Piccadilly line track to Holborn still in situ. Station used as filming location (e.g. The Prodigy - Firestarter) and there are occasional tours.

  • @ttrjw
    @ttrjw 2 роки тому

    Thameslink was a GLC inspired scheme. The pure engineering costs were in the low single digit millions - most of the costs were the shiny new Class 319 trains...

  • @whywhy6055
    @whywhy6055 2 роки тому +1

    Near the end of the video, I think LU are gonna use the old thameslink line to Moorgate for the stabilisation of trains.

    • @grahamwhitworth9454
      @grahamwhitworth9454 2 роки тому +1

      That's reassuring - we wouldn't want them to be unstable!

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 2 роки тому

      @@uingaeoc3905 It was part of Bedpan , and so think so until the Thameslink Trains got longer

  • @raphaelnikolaus0486
    @raphaelnikolaus0486 Рік тому

    One thing I wonder: Why specifically Farringdon? Why was that area chosen originally as the Grand Terminus, then chosen as the first Eastern or City Terminus of the Met? (And ending up becoming an interchange between Underground an Main-line Railway.) Why Farringdon?

  • @batman51
    @batman51 2 роки тому

    As the Metropolitan Railway was connecting the main line railways, why did the build Euston at Euston Square? (And Kings Cross wasn't great either).

  • @Andrewjg_89
    @Andrewjg_89 2 роки тому

    As you mentioned Barbican. What is happening with the former Thameslink platforms that Thameslink used to operate to Moorgate from Bedford and Luton and Class 319 EMUs were used.
    Before the Farringdon-Moorgate section was closed in 2009 and Farringdon station was upgraded to accommodate the Class 700 12-Car trains as part of the Thameslink programme. Will the former Thameslink platforms at Barbican could be used as a siding.

    • @jeremybuck1818
      @jeremybuck1818 2 роки тому +1

      Yes there is a plan to use them as sidings/stabling for Met trains...

    • @Andrewjg_89
      @Andrewjg_89 2 роки тому

      @@jeremybuck1818 But when is it going to happen. It seems empty at the moment.