Leytonstone | |
---|---|
Location | Leytonstone |
Local authority | London Borough of Waltham Forest |
Managed by | London Underground |
Station code(s) | LES[1] |
Number of platforms | 3 |
Fare zone | 3 and 4 |
OSI | Leytonstone High Road [2] |
London Underground annual entry and exit | |
2019 | 9.82 million[3] |
2020 | 5.65 million[4] |
2021 | 4.26 million[5] |
2022 | 6.70 million[6] |
2023 | 6.96 million[7] |
Railway companies | |
Original company | Eastern Counties Railway |
Pre-grouping | Great Eastern Railway |
Post-grouping | London and North Eastern Railway |
Key dates | |
22 August 1856 | Opened |
5 May 1947 | Central line service introduced |
1 September 1955 | Goods yard closed[8] |
Other information | |
External links |
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Coordinates | 51°34′06″N 0°00′30″E / 51.5683°N 0.0083°E |
London transport portal |
Leytonstone is a London Underground station in Leytonstone in the London Borough of Waltham Forest, east London. It is on the Central line, on the boundary of Zones 3 and 4. Towards Central London, the next station is Leyton, while going east from Leytonstone, the line divides into two branches. On the direct route to Woodford and Epping the next stop is Snaresbrook, and on the Hainault loop it is Wanstead. The station is close to Whipps Cross University Hospital. It is a terminus for some services and returns westbound.
The railway line from Loughton Branch Junction (on the Lea Valley line between Stratford and Lea Bridge) to Loughton was built by the Eastern Counties Railway and opened on 22 August 1856.[9] A station at Leytonstone was opened on the same day.[10] In turn it became, from 1862, part of the Great Eastern Railway system and then in 1923 part of the London & North Eastern Railway before being transferred to London Transport in 1947. This formed part of the New Works Programme (1935–1940) that was to see major changes at Leytonstone with the station becoming the junction of the existing Loughton-Epping-Ongar line, newly electrified, with the new tube tunnel running under Eastern Avenue towards Newbury Park. This work saw a complete reconstruction of the station along with the removal of the level crossing at Church Lane and its replacement by an underbridge. The work stopped in May 1940 due to wartime priorities; further delays were caused by the station buildings being hit by a German bomb in January 1944. During the war, the new tunnels were used as an aircraft component factory; the part closest to Leytonstone was a public air-raid shelter.[11]
The station was first served by the Central line on 5 May 1947, when it became the temporary terminus of the line, passengers changing to steam shuttle onwards to Epping. This ceased on 14 December 1947 with the extension of Underground services to Woodford and Newbury Park.
London Buses routes 66, 145, 257, 339, W13, W12, W15, W16 and W19 and night route N8 serve the station and bus station.
Preceding station | London Underground | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Leyton towards Ealing Broadway or West Ruislip
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Central line | Snaresbrook towards Epping
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Wanstead | ||||
Out of system interchange | ||||
Preceding station | London Overground | Following station | ||
Leyton Midland Road towards Gospel Oak
|
Suffragette line Gospel Oak to Barking line transfer at Leytonstone High Road
|
Wanstead Park towards Barking Riverside
| ||
Historical railways | ||||
Leyton Line and station open |
Great Eastern Railway Eastern Counties Railway Loughton branch |
Snaresbrook Line and station open |