The original
royal assent for the construction of the CCE&HR was granted under the
Charing Cross, Euston and Hampstead Railway Act 1893 (
56 & 57 Vict. c. ccxiv) but gave permission for a railway only as far north as Hampstead. Financing difficulties meant that no work had begun by the beginning of the 20th century and the company was bought out in 1900 by a syndicate led by American financier
Charles Yerkes. Following the purchase, plans were revised to continue the route under the Heath to Golders Green where a depot could be constructed and where open farmland offered opportunities for property development. The new proposals met with strong opposition from residents of Hampstead and users of the heath who feared that the construction of tunnels would detrimentally affect the Heath's ecology. The
Metropolitan Borough of Hampstead also initially objected but relented and parliamentary approval was granted for the extended route in the
Charing Cross, Euston and Hampstead Railway Act 1903 (
3 Edw. 7. c. ci). One of the conditions for construction of the extended route was the provision of an intermediate station at North End, which would have been located on
Hampstead Way. The station would have served a new residential development being planned to the north of the heath, but
Henrietta Barnett instigated the purchase of the land from
Eton College in 1904 to form the
Hampstead Heath Extension instead. {{cite book Tunnelling for the CCE&HR had begun in 1903 and the construction of the station continued to the extent that the larger diameter station tunnels and low-level passageways were excavated. However, it became apparent that the cancellation of the proposed residential development would significantly reduce the number of passengers using the station. Works on the station were ended in 1906 before the lift shafts were dug and before any work on a surface building was done. ==Bunker==