Early history The area of
King's Cross was previously a village known as Battle Bridge which was an ancient crossing of the
River Fleet, originally known as Broad Ford, later Bradford Bridge. The river flowed along what is now the west side of Pancras Road until it was rerouted underground in 1825. The name "Battle Bridge" is linked to tradition that this was the site of a major battle between the Romans and the
Celtic British Iceni tribe led by
Boudica. According to folklore, King's Cross is the site of Boudica's final battle and some sources say she is buried under one of the platforms. Platforms 9 and 10 have been suggested as possible sites. Boudica's ghost is also reported to haunt passages under the station, around platforms 8–10.
Great Northern Railway (1850–1923) King's Cross station was built in 1851–52 as the London terminus of the
Great Northern Railway (GNR), and was the fifth London terminal to be constructed. It replaced a temporary station next to
Maiden Lane (now
York Way) that had been quickly constructed with the line's arrival in London in 1850, and had opened on 7 August 1850. The station took its name from the
King's Cross building, a monument to
King George IV that stood in the area and was demolished in 1845. Construction was on the site of a
smallpox hospital. Plans for the station were made in December 1848 under the direction of
George Turnbull, resident engineer for constructing the first of the Great Northern Railway out of London. The station's detailed design was by
Lewis Cubitt, the brother of
Thomas Cubitt (the architect of
Bloomsbury,
Belgravia and
Osborne House), and Sir
William Cubitt (who was chief engineer of the
Crystal Palace built in 1851, and consulting engineer to the
Great Northern and
South Eastern Railways). The design comprised two great arched
train sheds, with a brick structure at the south end designed to reflect the arches behind. Its main feature was a high clock tower that held treble, tenor and bass bells, the last of these weighing 1 ton 9 cwt (1.47 tonnes). In size, it was inspired by the long
Moscow Riding Academy of 1825, leading to its built length of . A turret clock exhibited by
E. J. Dent & Co. at the Great Exhibition of 1851 (awarded a Council Medal) was later associated with the station’s timekeeping arrangements. The station, the biggest in England at that time, opened on 14 October 1852. Originally it had one arrival and one departure platform (today's platforms 1 and 8), and the space between was used for carriage sidings. The platforms have been reconfigured several times. They were numbered 1 to 8 in 1972. In 2010 and 2021 the station was reconfigured again and now has 11 platforms numbered 0 – 10. Suburban traffic quickly grew with the opening of stations at
Hornsey in 1850,
Holloway Road in 1856, in 1859 and Seven Sisters Road (now ) in 1861.
Midland Railway services to via and began running from King's Cross on 1 February 1858. More platforms were added in 1862: No. 2 was full-length, but No. 3 was stepped into the northern end of the station. In 1866, a connection was made via the
Metropolitan Railway to the
London, Chatham and Dover Railway at , with goods and passenger services to South London via . A separate suburban station to the west of the main building, housing platforms 9–11 and known initially as "Kings Cross Main Line (Local) Station", opened in August 1875. A platform, later numbered platform 16, was opened on the connection to the
Metropolitan Railway on 1 February 1878; previously, trains had had to reverse into the main station. Two platforms (now 5 and 6) were opened on 18 December 1893 to cater for increased traffic demands. An iron footbridge was built halfway down the train shed to connect all the platforms. By 1880, half the traffic at King's Cross was suburban. A significant bottleneck in the early years of operations was at Gas Works tunnel underneath the
Regent's Canal immediately to the north of the station, which was built with a single
up track and a single
down track. Commercial traffic was further impeded by having to cross over on-level running lines to reach the goods yard. Grade separation of goods traffic was achieved by constructing the skew bridge that opened in August 1877, and the second and third Gas Works tunnels opened in 1878 and 1892 respectively. On 15 September 1881, a light engine and a coal train collided near the mouth of the
Copenhagen Tunnel north of the station because of a signalman's error. One person was killed and another was severely injured.
British Rail (1948–1996) Following
nationalisation on 1 January 1948, King's Cross came under the management of
British Railways'
Eastern Region. Diesel services were introduced during the 1950s when steam was being phased out. All main line services were converted to diesel by June 1963. Platform numbers were reorganised in 1972, to run consecutively from 1 (east) to 14 (west). The track layout was simplified in the 1970s by reusing an old flyover for freight near the Copenhagen Tunnels at Holloway, and reducing the number of running lines through the Gas Works tunnels from six to four. At the same time, electrification started with the installation of a 25 kV overhead line to cater for suburban services as part of the
Great Northern Suburban Electrification project. The works were completed on 3 April 1977, and electric services began running from King's Cross to
Hertford, and . The construction of the
Victoria line and its interchange at King's Cross was seen by British Rail as an opportunity to modernise the station. A single-storey extension containing the main passenger concourse and ticket office, designed in-house, was built at the front of the station in 1972. Although intended to be temporary, it was still standing 40 years later, obscuring the
Grade I-listed façade of the original station. Before the extension was built, the façade was hidden behind a small terrace of shops. The extension was demolished in late 2012, revealing the
Lewis Cubitt architecture. In its place, the King's Cross Square was created, and opened to the public on 26 September 2013. On 10 September 1973, a
Provisional IRA bomb
exploded in the booking hall at 12.24 p.m., causing extensive damage and injuring six people, some seriously. The device was thrown without warning by a youth who escaped into the crowd and was not caught. King's Cross was a London terminus for
InterCity 125 high speed services, along with
Paddington. By 1982, almost all long-distance trains leaving King's Cross were 125s. The service proved to be popular, and the station saw regular queues across the concourse to board departing trains. The
King's Cross fire in 1987 started in the machine room for a wooden escalator between the main line station and the
London Underground station's
Piccadilly line platforms. The escalator burned and much of the tube station caught fire, killing 31 people, with smoke spreading to the main line station. In 1987, British Rail proposed building a new station with four platforms for international trains through the
Channel Tunnel, and four for
Thameslink trains under King's Cross. After six years of design work, the plans were abandoned, and the international terminal was constructed at St Pancras. British Rail completed electrification of the East Coast Main Line to and
Edinburgh between 1985 and 1991, and electric
InterCity 225 rolling stock was introduced to work express services. These began service between King's Cross and Leeds on 2 October 1989, and to Edinburgh on 8 July 1991.
Privatisation (1996–present) Before privatisation, the King's Cross area had a reputation for run-down buildings and prostitution in front of the main entrance. There was a major clean-up during the 1990s and the station's atmosphere was much improved by the end of the decade. Following the
privatisation of British Rail in 1996, express services into the station were taken over by the
Great North Eastern Railway (GNER). The company refurbished the
British Rail Mark 4 "Mallard" rolling stock used for long-distance services from King's Cross and the inauguration of the new-look trains took place in the presence of
the Queen and
the Duke of Edinburgh in 2003. GNER successfully re-bid for the franchise in 2005, but surrendered it in the following year.
National Express East Coast took over the franchise in late 2007 after an interim period when trains ran under a management contract. In 2009, it was announced that National Express was no longer willing to finance the East Coast subsidiary, and the franchise was taken back into public ownership and handed over to
East Coast in November. In March 2015 the franchise was re-privatised and taken over by
Virgin Trains East Coast. In November 2017, Transport Secretary
Chris Grayling announced the early termination of the East Coast franchise in 2020, three years ahead of schedule, following losses on the route by the operator. The current provider of ECML services is
London North Eastern Railway.
Restoration , has been described as being "like some kind of reverse waterfall, a white steel grid that swoops up from the ground and cascades over your head". It involved restoring and reglazing the original arched train shed roof and removing the 1972 extension at the front of the station and replacing it with an open-air plaza. The new semi-circular departures concourse opened to the public in March 2012. Situated to the west of the station behind the Great Northern Hotel, it was designed by
John McAslan and built by
Taylor Woodrow Construction. It caters for much-increased passenger flows and provides greater integration between the intercity, suburban and underground sections of the station. The architect claimed that the roof is the longest single-span station structure in Europe and the semi-circular structure has a radius of and more than 2,000 triangular roof panels, half of which are glass. In the restoration, refurbished offices have opened on the east side of the station to replace ones lost on the west side, and a new platform, numbered 0, opened underneath them on 20 May 2010. Diesel trains cannot normally use this platform for environmental reasons. The restoration project was awarded a
European Union Prize for Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Award in 2013. In October 2021,
Lumo commenced operating services to
Edinburgh Waverley via
Stevenage,
Newcastle and
Morpeth.
Remodelling In January 2018, it was announced that half the station would close for 3 months from January to March 2020 for remodelling work to the station and its approach, expected to cost £237 million. This includes rationalisation of the tracks, reopening the third tunnel to the approach of the station and closure of platform 10. In June 2021, Network Rail released a time lapse video showing the completion of the works.
Accidents and incidents There have been many passenger train accidents at King's Cross over the years. The most serious were the
King's Cross railway accident on 4 February 1945 which killed two people and injured 25 The most recent was on 17 September 2015 when a passenger train collided with the
buffer stops, injuring fourteen people. There have also been a number of accidents which killed or injured railway employees. On 5 November 1979,
Martin Allen was seen saying goodbye to his friends at King's Cross. He set off in the direction of the Piccadilly line platform, but he was never seen again. The station is also where
Andrew Gosden was last seen before going missing on 14 September 2007. He had caught a train there from under controversial and unexplained circumstances. ==Other stations==