Kew railway station (England)

Kew railway station was opened by the North and South Western Junction Railway in 1853 in Brentford in west London on the western curve of the Kew triangle. It closed in 1862[1] after the railway had in 1862 opened its Kew Bridge platforms (closed since 1940) on the eastern curve and which were connected to the LSWR Kew Bridge station, itself on the southern chord.

Kew
Location
Operations
Number of platforms2
History
Original companyNorth and South Western Junction Railway
Pre-groupingNorth and South Western Junction Railway
1 August 1853Opened
1 February 1862Closed
National Rail – UK railway stations

Although Kew and Kew Bridge are applied to structures on the north bank of the Thames Kew does not extend across the river.

Potential reopening

West London Orbital proposal which would see reinstatement of the Dudding Hill Line and new stations built at Harlesden and Neasden, a new passenger service will run from Hounslow to Hendon and West Hampstead Thameslink and a new station could be built at Lionel Road as Proposed which would be close to the former site of Kew station.[2][3] The feasibility study stated was a good business case for a station but noted that the station is not required in order to open the line.

gollark: Mysterious.
gollark: Which is basically just doing tagged unions without nice language support.
gollark: Which you can do by checking which properties are there or something, which is flaky.
gollark: You have to be able to detect if an object is an AType or BType.
gollark: Imagine you got a list containing both ATypes and BTypes and want to display a list of them or something. The logic for each is somewhat different because they represent slightly different entities.

References

  1. Forgotten Stations of Greater London by J.E.Connor and B.Halford (page 54)
  2. London Railway Atlas 5th Edition by Joe Brown p.37
  3. West London Orbital p.16


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