Construction map of lines in South East London, including the southern portion of the East London Line The station occupies the north end of the former
Thames foot tunnel built by
Marc Isambard Brunel between 1825 and 1843, and subsequently adapted for railway traffic. Access to the station is by lift or a flight of stairs built into one of the original access shafts of the Thames Tunnel.
London, Brighton and South Coast Railway The station was originally opened as the northern terminus of the East London Railway on 7 December 1869 as
Wapping and Shadwell, and the station was renamed
Wapping on 10 April 1876, when the line was extended northwards to , but the station was last served by District trains on 31 July 1905. In 1980 a London Underground plan to extend the
Jubilee line to
Woolwich Arsenal and
Beckton was approved by Parliament. This included a station at Wapping between new stations at
St Katharine Docks and
Surrey Docks North, but was never built. The extension constructed in the 1990s followed a different route to the south of the River Thames. The station was extensively remodelled between 1995 and 1998, when the entire
East London line — including Wapping station — was closed due to repair work on the tunnels under the Thames. Vitreous enamel panels by Nick Hardcastle, showing the station and the area in former and modern times, were installed on the platforms.
London Overground The
East London line of the Underground closed on 22 December 2007, and reopened on 27 April 2010 when it became part of the new
London Overground system. During this time the station was heavily refurbished. The proposed extension of the East London line raised concerns that the station would have to be closed due to its platforms being too short (only four cars long) to accommodate the new rolling stock planned for the extended line (which could be six or eight cars long). The narrowness of the platforms was also a concern. The station does not fully meet the safety standards for an underground station but is permitted to operate under a derogation from
His Majesty's Railway Inspectorate. Despite this, on 16 August 2004 then-
Mayor of London Ken Livingstone announced that the station would remain open. The station is served by
National Rail London Overground services under the control of the
London Rail division of
Transport for London, however there is no standard red National Rail "double arrow" logo signage located at the station, instead only the Overground roundel. ==Services==