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Waterloo & City Line

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Waterloo & City Line
Colour on map Teal
Year opened 1898
Line type Deep Tube
Rolling stock 1992 Tube Stock
Stations served 2
Length (km) 2.5
Length (miles) 1.5
Depots Waterloo
Journeys made 9,616,000 (per annum)
Rail lines of
Transport for London
London Underground lines
  Bakerloo
  Central
  Circle
  District
  East London
  Hammersmith & City
  Jubilee
  Metropolitan
  Northern
  Piccadilly
  Victoria
  Waterloo & City
Other lines
Docklands Light Railway
  Tramlink

The Waterloo & City Line is a short underground railway line in London, which formally opened on 11 July 1898. It has only two stations, Waterloo and Bank (formerly called "City", hence the name of the line), between which it passes under the River Thames. It exists almost exclusively to serve commuters between Waterloo mainline station and the City of London, and does not operate late in the evening or on Sundays. By far the shortest line on the London Underground, at only 1.5 miles (2.5 km), it takes only four minutes to travel from end to end. It was the second electric tube railway to open in London, after the cable-hauled Tower Subway and the City and South London Railway.

History

The line was designed by civil engineer W.R. Galbraith and James Henry Greathead. Originally part of the London and South Western Railway, it became part of the Southern Railway in 1923. It was nationalised with the main-line railways in 1948. The line served as an extension of the main line into Waterloo, which had originally been intended to run to the City but was prevented from doing so by the 1846 ban on surface railways running through the central area of London. Its ticketing was fully integrated with the national network and passengers could buy through tickets from mainline rail stations to Bank. It became part of London Underground in 1994, when it was sold for the nominal sum of one pound.

The Waterloo & City is colloquially known as The Drain. While the reason for this is not known for certain, there are three main theories: some believe it relates to the smell of the marshy ground on which Waterloo is built, while some others believe it relates to the drain-like round deep-level tunnels, which were nicknamed "tubes" on the other lines. Some people suggest that the depiction of the line on the Underground map brings to mind a drainage pipe leading out of the City.

A carriage being lifted out of Waterloo depot
Enlarge
A carriage being lifted out of Waterloo depot

One curiosity of the Waterloo & City is that uniquely among Underground lines it is underground for its entire length (the Victoria Line's only non-underground section is to the depot). This presents considerable difficulties in transporting trains to and from the line. Before the construction of Waterloo International terminal in 1990, the trains were vertically hoisted, one carriage at a time, using an Armstrong lift outside the north wall of Waterloo main-line station.This is now done using a road-mounted crane in a shaft adjacent to the depot and south of Waterloo main-line station. When the Waterloo & City had its own power station, coal was delivered from Waterloo main-line station using a second, smaller lift (known as the Abbotts Lift), which explains the continued presence of a wagon turntable in Waterloo depot. The remaining stub of the siding tunnel that led to the Armstrong Lift can still be seen on the left hand side of the train shortly after leaving Waterloo for Bank.

In January 2003 the Waterloo & City was closed for over three weeks for safety checks due to a major derailment on the Central Line, which required all 1992 stock trains to be modified. That same year, responsibility for the line's maintenance was given to the Metronet consortium under the terms of a Public-Private Partnership arrangement.

Trains

A train of modified 1992 stock in its original Network SouthEast livery stands at Bank station on the Waterloo and City Line.
Enlarge
A train of modified 1992 stock in its original Network SouthEast livery stands at Bank station on the Waterloo and City Line.

. The line has had only three types of rolling stock in its lifetime.

Up to the time of closure due to refurbishment (see below) the Class 482 trains carried the original blue British Rail Network SouthEast livery that they had when they were introduced, despite having been part of London Underground for more than ten years.

Map and stations

The line has been closed on a number of occasions for repairs and vehicle checks, including between 31 March 1994 and 5 April 1994.

Refurbishment

New battery powered locomotive for works during the closure.
Enlarge
New battery powered locomotive for works during the closure.

The line was shut on 1 April 2006 for refurbishment works. It will reopen on 4 September 2006. As well as the repainting and cleaning of the trains, the work includes refurbishment of the tunnels, platforms and depot, and upgrading of the track and signalling systems. These and other works to be completed by 2007 are expected to boost rush-hour capacity by 25% and line capability by 12% at a cost of tens of millions of pounds. Four new 75-hp battery-powered locomotives named Walter, Lou, Anne and Kitty were built by Clayton Equipment in Derby to haul materials and plant along the line during the closure.

Beyond these changes Metronet plan to refurbish one of the stations by 2011.

Use as a filming location

Because of its Sunday closures, the Waterloo & City has become a well-established and convenient location for filming. It can be seen in the 1998 Gwyneth Paltrow film Sliding Doors and in the BBC's 1984 adaptation of The Tripods, where it masquerades as Porte de la Chapelle station on the Paris Métro.

References

External links

West: Crossings of the River Thames East:
Waterloo Bridge Waterloo & City Line Blackfriars Bridge

 


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