The station was opened in 1842 as
Burnt Mill, to serve the small village of the same name. Between March 1959 and July 1960 the station was rebuilt to serve the post-war
new town of
Harlow, to designs by
Paul Hamilton with John Bicknell and Ian Fraser of the
British Railways (Eastern Region) architects department (chief architect:
H. H. Powell). Described by Pevsner as "low, crisp and entirely ungimmicky", its architectural quality was recognised in 1996 when it was made a Grade II
listed building. The listing entry states "the Eastern Region Architect's Department was the most creative branch of British Railways, designing a number of powerful modern stations in conjunction with the Region's electrification. The new station for Harlow New Town was the flagship of this achievement. It is a building with powerful spatial qualities, of especial interest particularly for its architectural design". The Architect and Building News in 1959 said
the architects have aimed at expressing the beauty of continuous surfaces of natural materials and paintwork has been reduced to a minimum. On 13 July 1960, the station was renamed
Harlow Town. Its status as a listed building has meant that alterations to conform with the
Disability Discrimination Act have had to be carried out sensitively to protect the original architectural conception. ==Services==