ADDISON ROAD - HAMMERSMITH

(1869-1916)

This line has been abandoned for so long that even some quite
knowledgeable railway historians have confessed to not knowing about it.
It ran from Addison Road to Richmond, providing through services
from Waterloo to Richmond.

District and Piccadilly Line services now use the section between (a point just
west of) Hammersmith and Richmond but the other section was abandoned - details below.

 

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The line diverged a quarter of a mile north of Addison Road (now Olympia) station on the West London line, following a semi circular route.

This photo is looking south at the line coming up from Addison Rd. On the left, mainly obscured, is the existing West London line. In the middle, the long-gone railway that caused the row of houses on the right to be built following the line of its divergence.

(Apr 2006)

 

 

 

Looking in the same direction but from slightly further north back toward the bridge that the above photograph was taken from. The track area is clearly visible.

(Apr 2006)

 

 

 

Northern view from the above bridge, this photo shows the West London line on the right and the route of the abandoned line on the left, indicated by the left hand block of flats (actually a hotel).

(Apr 2006)

 

 

 

 

 

 

The road on top of the bridge (Addison Gardens). The bridge is obviously too long for just one set of tracks.

Those with astute observation may have noticed an example of White Van Driver Syndrome here: the driver of this van, somewhat lost and not wanting to go around the long way, decided to go through the no entry route, only to encounter a line of cars coming in the opposite direction. Disappointingly, he chose to reverse (there would have been far more entertainment value had he indulged in a punch-up instead!).

(Apr 2006)

 

 

 

 

 

 

The barely discernible hump in the road at Richmond Way indicating the line of the railway. The building on the left, built on the line of the railway, is the K West hotel, the back of which is visible on the right hand side of the photo above.

Why road humps survive when all other railway remains disappear is something of a mystery. One guess would be that levelling the road, along with all the utilities (gas, electricity, telephone, water) that run under the road surface, would be prohibitively expensive.

(Apr 2006)

 

 

 

 

 

 

The track bed below Rockley Road. The beam at the top is one of the joists holding the road up above it.

(July 2002)

 

 

 

 

 

 

The hump on Shepherds Bush Road. The block of flats is built on the site of Shepherds Bush station. Despite being closed to passenger traffic in 1916, the station site survived until the late 1950s/early 1960s. That there was a station here, explains why the ground floor of those flats is well below the level of the road.

(Jan 2002)

 

 

 

 



Shepherds Bush station site in July 2002.
The block of flats on the far side of the bridge is The Grampians, built in the 1930s on the line of the railway.

For a photo of the station in 1955, forty years after closure, move your mouse over the image above.

 

 

 

 

 

 

After Shepherds Bush station, the line ran underneath what is now the Hammersmith & City line just south of Goldhawk Road station. This view of that point is looking east.

(July 2002)

 

 

 

 

 

 

From there it straightened and climbed onto a viaduct running between, and parallel to, the Hammersmith & City line and Hammersmith Grove.

Very little of that viaduct remains - this photo shows a section truncated at Trussley Road. There was a link between this line and what is now the Hammersmith & City line just south of here that allowed Metropolitan line access to Richmond.

(July 2002)

 

 

 

 

 

 

View of the track bed leading back to the edge of the demolished bridge shown above.

(July 2002)

 

 

 

 

 

 

A section of the raised track bed slightly further south from the photo above. This is the location of the junction with the Hammersmith & City line and presumably why the track bed is so wide here.

(Apr 2006)

 

 

 

 

 

 

The access ramp to the area above with a novel wall built from old sleepers.

(Apr 2006)

 

 

 

 

Approaching Hammersmith, the route took a 90 degree turn (the turn was where Hammersmith Grove Road station was situated) so that it ran west toward Richmond, parallel with King Street.

The small remnant shown here leads directly to the point where the District/Piccadilly tracks join it.

(Apr 2006)

 

 

 

 

 

 

It's very hard to make it out from this photo but this is the point at which the viaduct passes over the eastbound District Line.
(The two inner and most obviously visible tracks are the Piccadilly line ones. The rail in the very bottom right of the photo belongs to the District Line westbound).

The viaduct was reconstructed here, in the early 1930s, to allow for one of the extra tracks for the Piccadilly Line extension to pass beneath it (even though the new extra track was used for the District Line). The decision to reconstruct the viaduct seems a strange one considering that it hadn't been used for passenger traffic since 1916 (the line was closed completely only a few years later).

 

 

 

 

 

 

When the District Line was extended west from Hammersmith in 1877, it used the LSWR rails to Richmond, joining them at Studland Road Junction, just west of Hammersmith station. This point (and the remains, as seen here, of the viaduct carrying the original LSWR line) can still be viewed from passing trains.

The line was electrified in 1906 and doubled up with a non-electrified line in 1911. Although the District Line was proving very successful, it was clear that the LSWR (and the Metropolitan and GWR routes along it) was not, so the non-electrified line proved to have a short service life (until the arrival of the Piccadilly Line).

 

 

 

 

 

 

When the Piccadilly line was also extended westwards from Hammersmith (in 1932), two new extra tracks had to be built from Hammersmith station to the point at which the old LSWR tracks could be intercepted. The two new tracks were built on the outer sides of the existing District ones (the northern most one was actually built on the other side of the old LSWR viaduct).

The original District Line tracks (the inner ones) from Hammersmith to Studland Road junction are now used by the Piccadilly Line. The train shown here (moving away from the camera) is a westbound District Line one. The current eastbound District Line is separated from the other tracks by the viaduct.

For a LSWR sign still in situ on one of the bridges, click here.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Westward view from the northern side of the viaduct showing the merging of the track areas (and Ravenscourt Park station) in the distance. The added-on nature of the track in the foreground is apparent here (the eastbound District line track).

(Apr 2006)

 

 

 

 

The track to nowhere: eastward view showing the course of the original route as it passes over the eastbound District line track.

(Apr 2006)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Not part of the above line but not far away is this truncated link from the Hammersmith & City line to the West London line (north of its own abandoned Shepherds Bush station). It used to branch off the H&C just south of Latimer Road station (it is still visible on the left just after leaving the station in a southbound direction)

The rest of it was demolished to provide room for the West Cross Route.

 


(Photos taken between 1977 and 1981, except where stated.) 


 

Stamford Brook - South Acton

 

 

 

 

 

All photos ©2000-2008. Reproduction prohibited.