Original structure Cannon Street station was built on a site where the
Hanseatic merchants'
Steelyard had been based from the 10th century until 1598. The site was proposed in 1860 by the
South Eastern Railway (SER) in response to its rival, the
London, Chatham & Dover Railway (LC&DR), extending a line into the
City of London as far north as
Ludgate Hill. The SER had already made plans to extend its line towards , but decided that it should complement this with a terminus in the City. In 1861, the company obtained an act of Parliament for a station in Cannon Street, a short distance from
Mansion House and the
Bank of England. In addition to taking traffic from the LC&DR, the new station would provide a direct railway link between the City and the
West End, over which a journey could be made in a fraction of the time taken travelling by road. The approach was a branch of the line to Charing Cross, west of London Bridge. Work started on the station and its approach in July 1863. The construction work was undertaken by
Lucas Brothers. The station was opened on 1 September 1866 at a cost of £4 million (now £ million). The original building was designed by
Sir John Hawkshaw and
John Wolfe-Barry and was characterised by its two
Christopher Wren-style towers, square and high, which faced on to the
River Thames. The towers supported an iron train shed, long and crowned by a high single arch, almost semicircular, of glass and iron. The station is carried over
Upper Thames Street on a brick viaduct, long and containing 27 million bricks. Below this viaduct exist the remains of a number of Roman buildings, which form a
scheduled monument. The bridge was open to pedestrians between 1872 and 1877; they paid a toll of
½d. The five-storey City Terminus Hotel, which fronted the station, was opened in May 1867. It was an
Italianate style hotel and forecourt, designed by
E. M. Barry, and it provided many of the station's passenger facilities, as well as an appropriate architectural frontispiece to the street. This arrangement was very similar to that put in place at Charing Cross. The hotel was also built by
Lucas Brothers. Upon its opening Cannon Street station was a stopping point for all services to and from Charing Cross, including boat trains to Continental Europe. A shuttle service between the two stations ran every 20 minutes and became a popular way of travelling between the City and the West End. However, the opening of the
District Railway as far as
Blackfriars caused traffic to decline, and its extension to
Mansion House the following year reduced it further. The SER's route could not compete with the Underground, which was more direct and reliable, but suburban traffic to Cannon Street remained significant, and the bridge was widened to in the late 1880s, allowing ten tracks with sidings. The rebuilt bridge was opened on 13 February 1892. The signal boxes outside the station were upgraded the following year. The SER merged with the LC&DR in 1899 to form the
South Eastern and Chatham Railway (SECR). The following year, the station was earmarked for part-time closures as it relied primarily on business travel, but this was rejected. A further proposal was a monorail running between London Bridge and Cannon Street, at an estimated cost of £100,000; this was also abandoned. The
London and Southwestern Railway (LSWR) became interested in using Cannon Street as a terminus, as it would allow a connection between
Waterloo and the City.
War and inter-war years Work on strengthening the bridge, by the addition of six new girders in between the existing ones, was completed in 1913. Most Cannon Street train services ceased during
World War I. Continental boat trains were stopped on 15 November 1914 and rerouted to Victoria. The station stopped being served by through services from Charing Cross on 31 December 1916, and was closed on Sundays. Services were reduced further on 1 May 1918, when it was closed after 3 p.m. on Saturdays and between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. Mondays to Fridays. This allowed Cannon Street to be used as a goods depot for war supplies. Between 5 and 28 June 1926, the station was closed to allow the
Southern Railway to carry out various works, including the rebuilding of the platforms, relaying of the tracks and installation of a new system of electrical signalling – the four-aspect colour light scheme. The station was also renovated and the glass roof cleaned. The number of platforms was reduced from nine to eight, with five set aside for the new electric trains. The signal box spanning the width of the railway bridge was removed. In July 1939, Cannon Street was closed for a week following a fire in
Borough Market which prevented any trains accessing it. The station, which had been subject to structural neglect prior to
World War II, suffered extensive bomb damage and was hit by several incendiary devices which damaged the roof. In 1943 a high explosive also hit platform 8. The original glass roof had been removed before the war, in an attempt to save it; however, the factory in which the roof was stored was itself badly bombed, destroying the roof.
Redevelopment Following
nationalisation of the railways in 1948, the station was managed by the
Southern Region of British Railways. The station's prime location coupled with the property boom of the 1950s and the need for
British Rail to seek alternative revenue streams made war-damaged Cannon Street a key target for property developers. and even a helipad. In 1962, the
British Transport Commission entered into an agreement with Town & Country Properties for the construction of a multi-storey office building above the station with of floor space. The cost of the development was £2.35 million (now £ million) and it was scheduled for completion by June 1965. In preparation for redevelopment, the remains of the train shed roof had been demolished in 1958, and Barry's hotel (which had been used as offices since 1931) soon followed in 1960. The architect selected to design the new building was
John Poulson who was good friends with Graham Tunbridge, a British Rail surveyor whom he had met during the war. Poulson took advantage of this friendship to win contracts for the redevelopment of various British Rail termini. He paid Tunbridge a weekly income of £25 and received in return building contracts, including the rebuilding of
Waterloo and
East Croydon stations. At his trial in 1974, Poulson admitted that, shortly before receiving the Cannon Street building contract, he had given Tunbridge a cheque for £200 and a suit worth £80. Poulson was later found guilty of corruption charges and given a seven-year concurrent sentence; Tunbridge received a 15-month suspended sentence and a £4,000 fine for his role in the affair. All that now remains of the original station architecture are the twin yellow brick towers at the country-end and parts of the low flanking walls.
Modern era 's office block in 2007 prior to redevelopment The station's twin brick towers were
listed Grade II in 1972. In 1974, the station was closed for five weeks from 2 August to 9 September to enable alterations to be made to the track and the approaches to London Bridge to be resignalled. Traffic was diverted to London Bridge, Charing Cross and . On 4 March 1976, a
Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) bomb of about 10 lb (4.5 kg) exploded on an empty commuter train leaving Cannon Street, injuring eight people on another train travelling alongside. On 15 February 1984, it was reported in
The Times that Cannon Street was to close. At the time, the station had been closed for weekends and evenings, and the publication of British Rail's new timetable for 1984–1985 revealed that it would lose all its direct off-peak services to the south-east. Services from Sevenoaks, , , , , , ,
Lewisham and
Greenwich would instead terminate at except during peak hours. This was denied by British Rail (Southern)'s manager David Kirby, who pointed out that it had invested £10 million in redecking the railway bridge, and that passengers travelling from the south-east during off-peak hours would most likely be visiting the
West End and not
the City. In 1986, the twin towers were restored in a project costing £242,000 (now £). The works revealed that the east tower still contained a large water tank which was used during the days of steam traction to replenish locomotives and to power the station's hydraulic systems. The brickwork was repaired, cleaned and repointed, and the
weather vanes gilded to complement the dome of nearby
St Paul's Cathedral. This work was one of the Railway Heritage Trust's first projects and coincided with an exhibition held in the station in August of the same year to mark its 150th anniversary. , unveiled in 2011 to mark the 400th anniversary of the
Worshipful Company of Plumbers whose Guild Hall was demolished to make way for the station. In the 1980s, there was another property boom and British Rail again began looking into further commercial uses of the Cannon Street landspace, including of office space. The
air rights over the platforms to the rear of Poulson's office were sold to Speyhawk which appointed
Bovis Construction to build a free-standing structure comprising two office blocks on a 6,000 tonne steel deck constructed over the station's eight platforms. The Cannons Club, a sports club, was founded beneath the station's arches around this time, and quickly became one of the most prestigious
squash clubs in the country.
InterCity, the high-speed arm of British Rail, subsequently sponsored the National Squash Championships and National Squash Challenge. The larger office block, the "Atrium building", provides of office space on six floors and is linked to the smaller building, the "River building", via a glazed link raised through a central glazed atrium. The River building, which has two storeys, is built on the steel deck and contained within the station's two flank walls, which were rebuilt, providing of office space. This building projects slightly beyond the restored twin towers which form the riverside boundary to the development. The Atrium building was later let to the
London International Financial Futures and Options Exchange (Liffe). The River building has a roof garden. The project cost around £500,000 and was laid to comply with planning restrictions which required the building to be low and flat to maintain the sight lines from St Paul's to
Tower Bridge. , showing roof garden and twin towers Planning permission was granted in March 2007 to replace the Poulson building, with a new air rights building designed by Foggo Associates.
Hines, the US developer, led a £360 million project involving the demolition of Poulson's office block, replacing it with a mixed-use development containing more than of office space alongside of station retail space. The redevelopment was part of a larger regeneration programme undertaken by
Network Rail to modernise and "unlock the commercial potential" of the main London termini; and were also redeveloped. Network Rail's director of commercial property said that the finished station would be "less congested and more accessible for passengers." Cannon Street won the award for "Major Station of the Year" at the 2013 National Rail Awards. In January 2015, the station's opening hours were extended to 0500–0100 Monday to Sunday (prior to this, the station had been closed on Sundays and during the evenings), and several services which previously terminated at Charing Cross were diverted to Cannon Street as a result of
Thameslink Programme works. Some of these services reverted to terminating at Charing Cross following the completion of the works, while services from the
Greenwich line and from
New Cross and
St Johns will permanently run to Cannon Street due to the removal of the Spa Road Junction. ==National Rail==