service The first station, originally named
Barking Road, was opened on 14 June 1847 by the
Eastern Counties and Thames Junction Railway on the south side of Barking Road in the
Parish of West Ham. It was renamed
Canning Town on 1 July 1873, and in 1888, this station was closed, being replaced by a new station on the north side of Barking Road (near Stephenson Street). The booking hall was replaced in the 1960s, and survived until 28 May 1994. The station was served by trains on the
North London line to
North Woolwich.
Jubilee Line Extension and Docklands Light Railway In the late 1980s, plans for the
Docklands Light Railway (DLR) extension to
Beckton considered various options - either running directly east/west between
Blackwall and
Royal Victoria, or following the
River Lea to call at Canning Town. In the early 1990s, the planned
Jubilee Line Extension station on the site meant that the dedicated DLR station was not built, with a combined interchange station to be built instead. The DLR extension to Beckton began running through the future station site in March 1994. The new station was built on the south side of the
A13, designed by
Troughton McAslan. The tiered design of the station placed the
DLR platforms directly above the
Jubilee line platforms allowing for easy interchange. A substantial bus station was also built as part of the station complex. The DLR platforms opened on 5 March 1998. With the opening of the Jubilee line platforms on 14 May 1999, the new station complex was complete and officially 'opened'. The DLR branch to
London City Airport opened on 2 December 2005. This branch diverges from the branch to Beckton south of the interchange, with trains from both branches serving the current platforms. In October 2019, the station was disrupted by protests led by the environmental pressure group
Extinction Rebellion (XR), causing the suspension of services at rush hour. During the protest, two XR members climbed on top of a Jubilee line train, one of whom appeared to kick commuters who were attempting to remove them. The growing crowd proceeded to throw objects at the protesters before a commuter grabbed them by the ankles and dragged them off the train and onto the platform, where a physical altercation took place. ==Design==