Willesden Green | |
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Main building viewed from the south-east
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Location of Willesden Green in Greater London
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Location | Willesden |
Local authority | London Borough of Brent |
Grid reference | TQ233849 |
Managed by | London Underground |
Number of platforms | 4 |
Fare zone | 2 and 3 |
London Underground annual entry and exit | |
2012 | 8.23 million |
2013 | 8.56 million |
2014 | 8.82 million |
2015 | 8.96 million |
Railway companies | |
Original company | Metropolitan Railway |
Key dates | |
24 November 1879 | Opened as Willesden Green |
1 June 1894 | Renamed Willesden Green and Cricklewood |
1938 | Renamed Willesden Green |
20 November 1939 | Bakerloo line service introduced |
7 December 1940 | Metropolitan line service withdrawn |
3 January 1966 | Goods yard closed |
1 May 1979 | Bakerloo line service replaced by Jubilee line |
Listed status | |
Listing grade | II |
Entry number | 1391808 |
Added to list | 07 November 2006 |
Other information | |
Lists of stations | |
WGS84 | 51°32′57″N 0°13′18″W / 51.5492°N 0.2217°WCoordinates: 51°32′57″N 0°13′18″W / 51.5492°N 0.2217°W |
Willesden Green is a London Underground station on Walm Lane in Willesden. It is served by the Jubilee line and is between Dollis Hill and Kilburn. Metropolitan line trains also pass through the station, but do not usually stop. The station is on the boundary of Travelcard Zone 2 and Zone 3.
The station opened on 24 November 1879 on the Metropolitan Railway (later the Metropolitan line). From 1894 to 1938 it was known as Willesden Green and Cricklewood station. From 20 November 1939 it also served the Stanmore branch of the Bakerloo line, with Met services being withdrawn the following year. It transferred to the Jubilee line in 1979. The station still has platforms on the Metropolitan line, but these are not in regular use and are only used when the Jubilee line is not serving the station due to planned engineering works or severe service disruption.
The main station buildings, which date from the reconstruction of 1925, are fine examples of the work of Charles Walter Clark, the Metropolitan Railway's architect, who used this style of marble white faience for several 'central' area stations. The diamond-shaped clock is also a trademark of his style. The ticket hall interior, which retains much of the original green tesserae mosaic tiling, is a rare survival and was one of the reasons that led to the station being made a Grade II Listed Building in December 2006.
Willesden Green is one of the few stations on the southern section of the former Metropolitan Main line to still have its original platform buildings intact and its architecture is typical for a station serving a medium-sized town. Baker Street and Neasden are the other stations to have their platform buildings intact. The line between Finchley Road and Harrow-on-the-Hill was quadrupled between 1914–1916, and many intermediate stations had to be rebuilt to enable the fast lines to be built.