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Harefield Road
How the Central Line extension to Harefield Road and Denham would have appeared on the London Underground Map today if it had been constructed
Location
PlaceRuislip
History
Opened byNever Opened
Planned byLondon Underground
Platforms2
Template:Portal frameless

London Passenger Transport Board[]

Harefield Road tube station was a proposed London Underground station on the western extension of the Central line beyond its current terminus at West Ruislip.

Under the London Passenger Transport Board's 1935-1940 New Works programme, the station would have been built on the existing Great Western & Great Central Joint Railway (GW&GCJR) line between West Ruislip and Denham, the extension's intended terminus.

Like many other new stations built by London Underground in rural areas around the capital, the construction of the station was intended to stimulate new housing developments in what was a rural part of Middlesex. Works on the extension were postponed during World War II and, after the war, green belt legislation was introduced to limit the expansion of urban areas. The area beyond West Ruislip was within the designated Metropolitan Green Belt and the intended developments were no longer allowed. Consequently the extension was cut back to West Ruislip, and opened in stages in 1947 and 1948.

Earlier station[]

A signal box existed on it's location by 1920. [1]

The Central line station site, immediately west of the Harvil Road overbridge, was that of an earlier station on the GW&GCJR line. That station opened on 24 September 1928 as Harefield Halt and was renamed South Harefield Halt in May 1929.[2] It was served by shuttle trains forming the main line local service between Uxbridge High Street, Denham and Gerrards Cross. However, the station lay Template:Convert/mi south of Harefield village and the building boom for which the later Central line extension was intended to cater had not occurred; usage was so thin that the halt closed again after traffic on 30 September 1931.[3]

It was marked as disused in 1934 [4], removed in 1935 [5] and marked as disused in 1938 [6], but it was marked as a freight halt in 1948 [7] suggesting some fright use in WW2.

It was completely remove from maps by 1951. [8][9] The small goods yard closed at the end of 1952 and the site is now occupied by a commercial company: it has no rail access. The location of Denham East Junction lies immediately to the west of the old goods yard. No trace remains of the 1928 halt, which was demolished in the 1950s, but the place were the goods yard was had been marked by 2 small triangles of waste land until they were built on in 2001 and 2020-2021.

References[]

Terminus {{{{{system}}} lines|{{{line}}}}} Terminus
Template:National Rail Historical stations
Line and station open
toward Template:National Rail Historical stations
Template:National Rail Historical lines
Template:National Rail Historical stations
Line and station open
toward Template:National Rail Historical stations
    Abandoned Plans    
    Proposed Denham Extension    
Terminus {{{{{system}}} lines|{{{line}}}}} Terminus
Denham
towards [[Template:S-line/LUL left/Central tube station|Template:S-line/LUL left/Central]]
Central line
towards [[Template:S-line/LUL right/Central tube station|Template:S-line/LUL right/Central]]

External links[]

  • Template:Mmukscaled

Coordinates: 51°34′25″N 0°27′42″W / 51.57358°N 0.46174°W / 51.57358; -0.46174


Template:Disused railway stations of London