Hayes & Harlington railway station
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Hayes & Harlington is a railway station serving the west London districts Hayes and Harlington in the London Borough of Hillingdon. It is Script error: No such module "convert". down the line from Template:Stn and is situated between Template:Rws and Template:Rws.
It has long operated as a minor stop on the Great Western Main Line and is at the start of a spur to Heathrow Airport, to and from which passenger trains operate since the early 21st-century building of the spur which benefits from a flyover junction.
The station is managed by the Elizabeth line, with most services also provided by the Elizabeth line, and late night services provided by the Great Western Railway.
History
The station is on the Isambard Kingdom Brunel-designed Great Western Main Line landscaped and laid from London Paddington to major towns in central and west Berkshire, Bristol, South Wales and with later direct additions to Birmingham and Taunton. The line was opened piecemeal; its first guise terminated on 4 June 1838 at a temporary Maidenhead station in Taplow to allow completion of the single-span brick high-level sounding arch over the Thames just west of that temporary halt. The station at Hayes opened in 1868[1] or 1864.[2]
From 1 March 1883, the station (then named Hayes) was served by District Railway services running between Template:Stl and Windsor (central). The service was discontinued as uneconomic on 30 September 1885.[3][4]
The film Trains at Hayes Station, showing trains passing through the station with stereophonic sound, was filmed from the roof of the defunct Aeolian pianola factory just north of the station. The factory had been purchased by the Gramophone Company when the pianola company had collapsed owing to fraud and technological obsolescence. The film is almost the first demonstration of stereophonic sound to accompany moving pictures, an invention of Alan Blumlein.
The booking office was replaced in 1961 with a building to a modern design erected on a concrete raft over the line.[5]
Description
The station has five platforms, four being through platforms and one being a terminus bay platform. Platforms 1 and 2 are only used during certain engineering works and during disruption on the relief lines; 3 and 4 are for services (which are stopping services) to and from London, Heathrow Airport, Reading and Oxfordshire; platform 5 is a bay terminus platform, which was used for half-hourly shuttle services to Paddington. Platform 5 is capable of holding an eight-car train; platforms 2, 3 and 4 can hold nine-car trains and platform 1 can hold five-car trains. Platforms 3 and 4 have been extended as part of Crossrail improvement works. All platforms are connected with a footbridge to the new station building as part of the new Crossrail station improvements, which include step-free access to all platforms, step-free access to Station Road and Station Approach/High Point Village.[6] All lines at Hayes & Harlington are electrified.[7]
Airport Junction
Airport junction adjoins the station the junction of the short Heathrow Airport branch. For this reason, the lines through the station are electrified with 25 kilovolt A.C. overhead power from London Paddington to the airport – the main line to Reading has been electrified by Template:Abbreviation early 2018 as part of a project to modernise the main line.
The junction itself, west of the station, consists of two high-speed turnouts from the main lines, the 'down' (away from London) line curving away to the left towards the Airport and the 'up' (towards London) line passing over a concrete flyover to clear (flyover) the up and down main lines. The construction permits London-bound electric trains to join the main line at the same time as westbound expresses serve the down main line.
Services
Frequency
As of the May 2023 timetable, the typical Monday to Friday off-peak Elizabeth line service is:[8]
- 4 tph (trains per hour) westbound to Heathrow Terminal 4
- 2 tph westbound to Heathrow Terminal 5
- 2 tph westbound to Reading
- 2 tph westbound to Maidenhead
- 2 tph eastbound to Shenfield
- 8 tph eastbound to Abbey Wood
Late night services are operated by the Great Western Railway, running westbound to Reading and Didcot Parkway, and eastbound to Paddington.[9]
Oyster "pay as you go" as well as contactless can be used for journeys originating or ending at Hayes & Harlington.[10]
Service table
Upgrades for the Elizabeth line
Various alterations were made by Network Rail to prepare the station for Elizabeth line services:[11]
- New station building
- Four new lifts to provide step-free access
- Platforms 1–4 extended
- New Script error: No such module "convert". bay platform 5 constructed (replacing existing bay)
- New platform canopies to platform 4 and 5
- Track work to widen the island platform 2 and 3 and to provide access to the new bay platform
Locale
Harlington is a green-buffered enlarged village whose south is the Bath Road which has major hotels as part of a cluster of Heathrow Airport Hotels the settlement merges into Hayes in the north which has two retail/regular commercial centres, the closer High Street area immediately adjoins the station and continues due north, a similar further hub is the Uxbridge Road found Script error: No such module "convert". further to the north.
Connections
London Buses routes 90, 140, 195, 278, 350, E6, H98, SL9, U4 and U5, school routes 696 and 698, and night route N140 serve the station.[12][13]
References
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- ↑ Chronology of London Railways by H.V.Borley p. 62
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- ↑ British Railways Magazine: Western Region Vol 12 No 6, page 176
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External links
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- Train times and station information for Hayes & Harlington railway station from National Rail
- News of Crossrail’s 2014 planning application
- Clip of Trains at Hayes Station (1935)
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- Rail transport stations in London fare zone 5
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- London stations without latest usage statistics 1819
- DfT Category D stations
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- Railway stations in the London Borough of Hillingdon
- Former Great Western Railway stations
- Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1868
- Railway stations served by Great Western Railway
- Railway stations served by the Elizabeth line
- Great Western Main Line