Euston was the first inter-city railway station in London. It opened on 20 July 1837 as the terminus of the
London and Birmingham Railway (L&BR). and Network Rail (2002–present).
Old station roof of 1837 The plan was to construct a station near the
Regent's Canal in
Islington to provide a connection for London dock traffic. An alternative site at
Marble Arch, proposed by Robert Stephenson, was rejected by a provisional committee, and a proposal to end the line at
Maiden Lane was rejected by the House of Lords in 1832. A terminus at
Camden Town, announced by Stephenson the following year, received royal assent on 6 May, before an extension was approved in 1834, allowing the line to reach Euston Grove where the original station was built by
William Cubitt. Initial services were three trains to and from with journeys taking just over an hour. On 9 April 1838, they were extended to a temporary halt at near
Bletchley where a coach service was provided to . The line to
Curzon Street station in
Birmingham opened on 17 September 1838, the journey of took around hours. The incline from Camden Town to Euston involved crossing the Regent's Canal on a gradient of more than 1 in 68 (1.47%). Because steam trains at the time could not climb such an ascent, they were cable-hauled on the down line towards Camden until 1844, after which bank engines were used. The L&BR's act of Parliament prohibited the use of locomotives in the Euston area, following concerns of residents about noise and smoke from locomotives toiling up the incline. ": the original entrance to Euston Station (photographed in 1896) The station was built with space left vacant for extra platforms, as it was originally planned for the
Great Western Railway (GWR) to use Euston, as the terminus of the
Great Western Main Line. In the event, the GWR chose to build their own terminus at
Paddington. The spare land was instead used for more platforms for ever expanding services as the railway network grew. The station building, designed by the classically trained architect
Philip Hardwick, had a trainshed by structural engineer
Charles Fox. It had two platforms, one each for departures and arrival. The main entrance portico, the
Euston Arch, also by Hardwick, symbolised the arrival of a major new transport system and was "the gateway to the north". It was high, supported on four by hollow
Doric propylaeum columns of
Bramley Fall stone, the largest ever built. It was completed in May 1838 and cost £35,000 (now £). The old station building was probably the first one in the world with all-
wrought iron roof
trusses. The first railway hotels in London were built at Euston. Two hotels designed by Hardwick opened in 1839 on either side of the Arch; the Victoria on the west had basic facilities while the Euston on the east was designed for first-class passengers. Between 1838 and 1841, parcel handling grew from 2,700 parcels a month to 52,000. By 1845, 140 staff were employed but trains began to run late because of a lack of capacity. The following year, two platforms (later 9 and 10) were constructed on vacant land to the west of the station that had been reserved for
Great Western Railway services. The L&BR amalgamated with the
Manchester & Birmingham Railway and the
Grand Junction Railway in 1846 to form the LNWR. The company headquarters were established at Euston requiring a block of offices to be built between the Arch and the platforms. The station's facilities were expanded with the opening of the Great Hall on 27 May 1849 replacing the original sheds. The Great Hall was designed by Hardwick's son
Philip Charles Hardwick in
classical style. It was long, wide, and high with a
coffered ceiling and a sweeping double flight of stairs leading to offices at its northern end. Architectural sculptor
John Thomas contributed eight allegorical statues representing the cities served by the line. The station faced Drummond Street, further back from Euston Road than the front of the modern complex; Drummond Street now terminates at the side of the station but then ran across its front. A short road, Euston Grove, ran from Euston Square towards the arch. A bay platform (later platform 7) for local services to
Kensington (Addison Road) opened in 1863. Two new platforms (1 and 2) were added in 1873 along with an entrance for cabs from Seymour Street. At the same time, the station roof was raised by to accommodate smoke from the engines. The continued growth of long-distance railway traffic led to major expansion along the station's west side starting in 1887. It involved rerouting Cardington Street over part of the burial ground (later St James's Gardens) of
St James's Church, Piccadilly, which was located some way from the church. To avoid public outcry, the remains were reinterred at
St Pancras Cemetery. Two more platforms (4 and 5) opened in 1891. Four departure platforms (now platforms 12–15), bringing the total to 15, and a booking office on Drummond Street opened on 1 July 1892. The line between Euston and Camden was doubled between 1901 and 1906. A new booking hall opened in 1914 on part of the cab yard. The Great Hall was redecorated and refurbished between 1915 and 1916 and again in 1927. The station's ownership was transferred to the
London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) in the
1923 grouping. Apart from the lodges on Euston Road and statues now on the forecourt, few relics of the old station survive. The
National Railway Museum's collection at York includes
Edward Hodges Baily's statue of
George Stephenson from the Great Hall; the entrance gates; and a
turntable from 1846 discovered during demolition. File:Euston Station - The Great Hall.jpg|The Great Hall File:Euston Station - 1851 - from Project Gutenberg - eText 13271.jpg|Euston Arch () File:LNWR War Memorial 2.jpg|
LNWR War Memorial by
Reginald Wynn Owen File:LNWR lodge Euston right.jpg|LNWR Portland stone entrance lodge File:British Railways in Wartime - Bridge of Goodbyes- Everyday Life at Euston Station, London, England, UK, 1944 D18904.jpg|Trains at Euston in 1944. -->
London, Midland and Scottish Railway redevelopment By the 1930s Euston was again congested and the LMS considered rebuilding it. In 1931 it was reported that a site for a new station was being sought, the most likely option was behind the existing station in the direction of Camden Town. The LMS announced in 1935 that the station (including the hotel and offices) would be rebuilt using a government loan guarantee. In 1937 it appointed the architect
Percy Thomas to produce designs. He proposed an American-inspired station that would involve removing or resiting the arch, and included office frontages along Euston Road and a helicopter pad on the roof. Redevelopment began on 12 July 1938, when of limestone was extracted for the building and new flats were constructed to rehouse people displaced by the works. The project was shelved indefinitely because of
World War II. The station was damaged several times during
the Blitz in 1940. Part of the Great Hall's roof was destroyed, and a bomb landed between platforms 2 and 3, destroying offices and part of the hotel.
New station Passengers considered Euston to be squalid and covered in soot and it was restored and redecorated in 1953, when an enquiry kiosk in the middle of the Great Hall was removed. Ticket machines were modernised. By this time the Arch was surrounded by property development and kiosks and in need of restoration. British Railways announced that Euston would be rebuilt to accommodate the
electrification of the
West Coast Main Line in 1959. Because of the restricted layout of track and tunnels at the northern end, enlargement only could be accomplished by expanding southwards over the area occupied by the Great Hall and the Arch. Permission to demolish the Arch and Great Hall was sought from
London County Council and it was granted on condition that the Arch would be restored and re-sited. BR estimated it would cost at least £190,000 (now £) and was not viable. The Arch's demolition, announced by the
Minister of Transport,
Ernest Marples in July 1961, drew objections from the
Earl of Euston, the
Earl of Rosse and
John Betjeman. Experts did not believe the work would cost £190,000 and speculated it could be done more cheaply by foreign labour. On 16 October 1961, 75 architects and students staged a demonstration against its demolition inside the Great Hall and a week later
Sir Charles Wheeler led a deputation to speak with the Prime Minister
Harold Macmillan. Macmillan replied that as well as the cost, there was nowhere large enough to relocate the Arch in keeping with its surroundings. Demolition began on 6 November and was completed within four months. The station was rebuilt by
Taylor Woodrow Construction to a design by
London Midland Region architects of British Railways,
William Robert Headley and
Ray Moorcroft, in consultation with
Richard Seifert & Partners. Redevelopment began in summer 1962 and progressed from east to west, the Great Hall was demolished and an temporary building housed ticket offices and essential facilities. Euston worked to 80% capacity during the works with at least 11 platforms in operation at any time. Services were diverted elsewhere where practical and the station remained operational throughout the works. The first phase of construction involved building 18 platforms with two track bays to handle parcels above them, a signal and communications building and various staff offices. The parcel deck was reinforced using 5,500 tons of structural steelwork. Signalling on the routes leading out of the station was reworked along with the electrification of the lines, including the British Rail
Automatic Warning System. Fifteen platforms had been completed by 1966, and the electric service began on 3 January. An automated parcel depot above platforms 3 to 18 opened on 7 August 1966. The station was opened by
Queen Elizabeth II on 14 October 1968. The station is a long, low structure, wide and deep under a high roof. It opened with integrated automatic ticket facilities and a range of shops; the first of its kind for any British station. The plan to construct offices above the station whose rents would help fund the cost of the rebuilding was scrapped after a government White Paper was released in 1963 that restricted the rate of commercial office development in London. In 1966, a "
Whites only" recruitment policy for guards at the station was dropped after the case of
Asquith Xavier, a migrant from
Dominica, who had been refused promotion on those grounds, was raised in Parliament and taken up by the Secretary of State for Transport,
Barbara Castle. A second development phase by
Richard Seifert & Partners began in 1979, adding of office space along the station frontage in the form of three low-rise towers overlooking Melton Street and Eversholt Street. The offices were occupied by
British Rail, then by Railtrack, and by Network Rail which has now vacated all but a small portion of one of the towers. The offices are in a functional style; the main facing material is polished dark stone, complemented by white tiles, exposed concrete and plain glazing. The station has a large concourse separate from the train shed. Originally, no seats were installed there to deter vagrants and crime, but were added after complaints from passengers. Few remnants of the older station remain: two
Portland stone entrance lodges, the
London and North Western Railway War Memorial and a statue of
Robert Stephenson by
Carlo Marochetti, from the old ticket hall, stands in the forecourt. A large statue by
Eduardo Paolozzi named
Piscator dedicated to German theatre director
Erwin Piscator is sited at the front of the courtyard, which as of 2016 was reported to be deteriorating. Other pieces of public art, including low stone benches by
Paul de Monchaux around the courtyard, were commissioned by Network Rail in 1990. The station has catering units and shops, a large ticket hall and an enclosed car park with over 200 spaces. The lack of daylight on the platforms compares unfavourably with the glazed trainshed roofs of traditional Victorian railway stations, but the use of the space above as a parcels depot released the maximum space at ground level for platforms and passenger facilities. Since 1996, proposals have been formulated to reconstruct the Arch as part of the redevelopment of the station, and its use as the terminus of the
High Speed 2 line. File:Euston station MMB 21.jpg|Euston station and associated offices File:Euston station signage.jpg|Station signage File:Euston Station from above - 06.JPG|The trainshed from above -->
Privatisation Ownership of the station transferred from
British Rail to
Railtrack in 1994, passing to Network Rail in 2002 following the collapse of Railtrack. In 2008, it was reported that the Arch could be rebuilt. In September 2011, the demolition plans were cancelled, and
Aedas was appointed to give the station a makeover. In July 2014 a statue of navigator and cartographer
Matthew Flinders, who circumnavigated the globe and charted Australia, was unveiled at Euston; his grave was rumoured to lie under platform 15 at the station, but had been relocated during the original station construction and in 2019 was found behind the station during excavation work for the HS2 line.
High Speed 2 redevelopment. The new line is drawn in orange (left). (The line to the right is
High Speed 1 entering
St Pancras International). In March 2010 the
Secretary of State for Transport,
Andrew Adonis announced that Euston was the preferred southern terminus of the planned
High Speed 2 line, which would connect to a newly built station near Curzon Street and Fazeley Street in Birmingham. This would require expansion to the south and west to create new sufficiently long platforms. These plans involved a complete reconstruction, involving the demolition of 220
Camden Council flats, with half the station providing conventional train services and the new half high-speed trains. The Command Paper suggested rebuilding the Arch, and included an artist's impression. The station is to have seven new platforms dropped from an original planned eight, taking the total to 23, with 10 dedicated to HS2 services and 13 to conventional lines at a low level. The flats demolished for the extension would be replaced by significant building work above. The Underground station would be rebuilt and connected to adjacent Euston Square station. As part of the extension beyond Birmingham, the Mayor of London's office believed it will be necessary to build the proposed
Crossrail 2 line via Euston to relieve 10,000 extra passengers forecast to arrive during an average day. To relieve pressure on Euston during and after rebuilding for High Speed 2, HS2 Ltd has proposed the diversion of some services to (for
Crossrail). This would include eight commuter trains per hour originating/terminating between and inclusive. In 2016, the Mayor
Sadiq Khan endorsed the plans and suggested that all services should terminate at Old Oak Common while a more appropriate solution is found for Euston. The current scheme does not provide any direct access between High Speed 2 at Euston and the existing
High Speed 1 at St Pancras. In 2015, plans were announced to link the two stations via a
travelator service. Platforms 17 and 18 closed in May and June 2019 for High Speed 2 preparation work. The
Euston Downside Carriage Maintenance Depot was demolished in 2018 in preparation for the start of tunnelling. The two office towers in front of the station were demolished between January 2019 and December 2020. The third tower at 1 Eversholt Street is not part of these plans. Two hotels on Cardington Street adjacent to the west of the station were also demolished. The
cemetery in adjacent St James's Gardens was also controversially excavated in 2018–19, resulting in an estimated 60,000 graves having to be exhumed, and the entire site being cleared of all human remains the largest exhumation in British history, and the corpses having to be reburied in
Brookwood Cemetery in
Brookwood, Surrey. In August 2019, the
Department for Transport (DfT) ordered an independent review of the project, chaired by the British
civil engineer Douglas Oakervee. The
Oakervee Review was published by the Department for Transport the following February, alongside a statement from the
Prime Minister Boris Johnson confirming that HS2 would go ahead in full, with reservations. The review said the rebuild was "not satisfactory" and called the management "muddled" and recommended a change of governance. In Summer 2020, the government asked Network Rail's chairman, Sir
Peter Hendy, to lead an oversight board; in October 2020, the
Architects' Journal reported that more than £100m had already been spent on engineering and architectural design fees.
Transport for London commissioner
Andy Lord was sceptical that the private sector would pay for the link to Old Oak Common. Government funding for the approach tunnel was subsequently restored in the
October 2024 United Kingdom budget; the source of funding for the station itself remained unconfirmed. == Criticism ==