Original station Stockwell station was ceremonially opened on 4 November 1890 by the
Prince of Wales (later
King Edward VII), as the most southerly station on the
City and South London Railway (C&SLR) – London's first successful deep-level tube railway. Passenger services began just over one month later on 18 December. The station was built with a single island platform with tracks on either side, an arrangement that today is rarely used underground on the network but which still exists at
Clapham North and
Clapham Common. Stockwell's original platform was further north than the new ones, and trains pass it today. The other terminus of the C&SLR line was
King William Street in the
City of London. On 3 June 1900, when an extension to Clapham Common was opened, Stockwell ceased to be a terminus. A flight of stairs at the south end of the platform was also added to take passengers to a subway that passed over the new northbound tunnel and joined the lift shaft at a higher level. The original building, designed by
T. P. Figgis, was similar to – but larger than – the existing surface building at
Kennington with a domed roof to the original lift shaft. The two lifts each carried 50 people to and from the platforms until their replacement by escalators in 1924. The station was modernised in advance of the
1926 extension from
Clapham Common to
Morden. A new surface building was constructed by
Charles Holden on the original site. The original station platforms were closed on 29 November 1923 and platforms sited to the south of the original were opened on 1 December 1924. At the same time the platforms were rebuilt to a larger diameter – and with a single platform in each tunnel – south of the original station tunnel.
New station The station was expanded to accommodate the Victoria line, whose extension from Victoria to Brixton opened on 23 July 1971. Parallel
cross-platform interchanges were provided between the two lines in both directions and the 1920s surface buildings were replaced by a modern structure. A third escalator was added to the existing pair, by constructing an additional shaft. Some construction work disturbed shelter tunnels constructed during war, that had to be re-sited. A
British Transport Police (BTP) station was later built above the station in 1985, as part of a BTP initiative to increase police presence across the Underground. As with all Victoria line stations, the platforms feature tiled murals in the seat recesses – the work at Stockwell designed by
Abram Games shows a swan, a reference to the nearby Swan
public house. The station has ticket halls, three escalators, seven gates, 13 payphones, a
Wi-Fi service, 9 vending machines and a photo booth. The ticket hall has electronic departure boards. The ticket office was closed in early 2015 as part of the TfL investment programme. ==Nearby infrastructure==