Fairlop Loop
The Fairlop Loop was a 6.5-mile branch line of the Great Eastern Railway. It opened to freight on 20 April 1903 and to passengers on 1 May 1903. It once connected Woodford on the Ongar branch to Ilford on the Main Line, with an eastward connection for goods, excursions and stock transfers to Seven Kings. Today it is the greater part of the Hainault Loop on London Underground's Central line.
History
The GER built the line to foster suburban growth in Edwardian Ilford and Chigwell; the results were mixed. Hainault station had so few passengers that it closed between 1908 and 1930. The loop passed to the London and North Eastern Railway in 1923 after the grouping of railways into The Big Four. The LNER added a station at Roding Valley in 1936 to serve a housing development. Most of the route transferred to the Central line of the London Transport Executive during 1947 and 1948 as part of the war-delayed New Works Programme. The transfer brought fourth-rail electrification to replace steam and construction of a deep-level line connecting Leytonstone on the Ongar branch with Newbury Park on the loop, together with severing connections between Newbury Park and Ilford and Seven Kings.First to go was the westward curve between Newbury Park Junction and Ilford Carriage Sidings Junction, on 30 November 1947. The other connection to Seven Kings West Junction was goods only and survived until 19 March 1956. The whole triangular junction disappeared under expansion of Ilford carriage sheds in 1959. Goods trains operated by British Rail continued using the loop via Woodford as far as Newbury Park until 4 October 1965. A short turn-back siding was provided on the former track-bed south of Newbury Park: after goods trains were withdrawn it was used by engineers' trains until 1992.
Layout
Woodford to Ilford
The Loop was double track and all six original stations had two 600 ft platforms: the 1936 station at Roding Valley had 500 ft platforms. Hainault station re-opened in 1948 with a third platform It is today used by terminating Central line trains. A fork at the northern end at Woodford Junction let trains leave or join the Ongar branch. A triangular junction at the southern end gave access to the main line, the site now occupied by Ilford carriage sheds and a maintenance depot run by Bombardier. The apex of the triangle was Newbury Park Junction, the western side was Ilford Carriage Sidings Junction, and the eastern side was Seven Kings West Junction.The topography challenged engineers. The line was on the surface but 260 yards of tunnel was bored immediately north of. The line between Roding Valley and Chigwell was on an embankment, and a three-arch viaduct was built over the River Roding. Further east, the embankment was bisected by the London end of the M11 motorway in 1977, a concrete bridge carrying the line over the road. Chigwell and Grange Hill were built in cuttings, Hainault and Fairlop on embankment, and most of the route south of Barkingside including Newbury Park was in a cutting. Only the platforms at Roding Valley and Barkingside are accessible from street level. Works for accessibility to each of the platforms at Roding Valley were completed in 2009; hitherto there were a couple of steps to street level.
Goods yards were at Grange Hill, Hainault, Fairlop, Barkingside and Newbury Park. One of the former sidings at Newbury Park is now the eastbound through line, with the former eastbound line normally used only for reversing, though it retains the connection facing Barkingside. The sidings at Grange Hill now form part of the north-facing access from Hainault Depot. They extend parallel to the station platforms, and there are also sidings at the southern end of the depot next to the platforms at Hainault. East of Chigwell a short siding served Chigwell Nursery in GER days, but this was closed, probably before Grouping into the LNER.
Newbury Park to Leytonstone
The line between Leytonstone and Newbury Park is of standard twin-bore construction, with the three intermediate stations all having central platforms. The route diverges from the Ongar branch east of Leytonstone at Leytonstone Junction, with the tracks passing either side of the latter and immediately diving underground. The route heads mostly beneath the A12 Eastern Avenue as far as Gants Hill. East of here it turns southeast along Perth Road, then east to pass beneath Ley Street to the alignment of Wards Road, before curving northwards beneath Glebelands Avenue to reach the surface just south of Newbury Park, with the tracks passing to either side of the trackbed of the former line to Ilford: this explains the relatively long tunnel between Gants Hill and Newbury Park. The tunnels were essentially completed when the Second World War broke out in 1939, and between March 1942 and the end of hostilities they were used as an underground munitions factory, complete with its own 18 in railway, by Plessey, based in Ilford for many years. The factory extended almost 5 miles with about 300,000 sq. ft. of space. Redbridge is the shallowest "deep-level" station on the Underground, 26 feet below street level, necessitating just a short of flight of stairs for entry. Gants Hill and Wanstead, due to their greater depth, have escalators, with additional ramps or stairs at the former.Stations
Stations served
From north-west to south-east- , opened 22 August 1856 by the Eastern Counties Railway, closed briefly, re-opening 14 December 1947.
- , opened 3 February 1936 as Roding Valley Halt by the LNER, closed 29 November 1947, re-opening 21 November 1948.
- , opened 1 May 1903 by the GER, closed 29 November 1947, re-opening 21 November 1948.
- , opened 1 May 1903 by the GER, closed 29 November 1947, re-opening 21 November 1948.
- , opened 1 May 1903 by the GER, closed 1 October 1908 to 3 March 1930. Closed 29 November 1947, re-opening 31 May 1948.
- , opened 1 May 1903 by the GER, closed 29 November 1947, re-opening 31 May 1948.
- , opened 1 May 1903 by the GER, closed 22 May 1916 to 30 June 1919. Closed 29 November 1947, re-opening 31 May 1948.
- , opened 1 May 1903 by the GER, closed 29 November 1947, re-opening 14 December 1947 as part of the Central line.
- *, opened 20 June 1839 by the Eastern Counties Railway. Operated by TfL Rail as of May 2015. Connection closed 30 November 1947.
- *, opened 1 March 1899 by the GER. Operated by TfL Rail as of May 2015. Connection closed 19 March 1956.
- , opened by LTE 14 December 1947.
- , opened by LTE 14 December 1947.
- , opened by LTE 14 December 1947.
- , opened 22 August 1856 by the ECR, closed briefly, re-opening 5 May 1947.
Station architecture
Service Pattern
Since 1947 (Central line)
Typical off-peak service pattern :- Through trains central London - - via : every 6-10 mins until c. 01:00.
- as above but additionally Hainault - : every 20 mins until 24:00.
- additional trains from to Newbury Park, every 20 mins.
Before 1947 (GER/LNER)
- Half-hourly during the day, circular service typically London Liverpool Street - Stratford - Ilford - Woodford - Stratford - London Liverpool Street.
Rolling stock
Since 1947 (Central line)
- Standard tube stock 1947-1963
- 1959 tube stock 1960-1964
- 1962 tube stock 1962-1995
- 1992 tube stock 1993–present
- Hainault - Woodford shuttle service saw a variety of stock from the early 1960s in conjunction with experimental Automatic Train Operation, such as 1960 tube stock and trials of both 1967 tube stock and modified 1973 tube stock, prior to introduction of the 1992 trains.
Before 1947 (GER/LNER)
- Steam locomotives included Holden 2-4-2T tank engines and Hill 0-6-2T tank engines built by the GER, and carriages were usually of the short wheelbase type, up to 16 per train.
The closed connection today
South of Newbury Park, the inclines to/from the tunnel portals towards Gants Hill diverge away from the former route. Immediately to the south is an electrical substation off Glebelands Avenue. Further south there is derelict land followed by a small area of allotment gardens north of Wards Road, with more allotments to the south and north of Benton Road. South of Benton Road, an outbuilding of St Aidan's School and Friars Close blocks of flats occupy the alignment as far south as Vicarage Lane. South of there are Piper Way flats just north of Ilford Carriage Sheds, the expansion of which followed the initial severing of the Newbury Park Junction to Ilford Carriage Sidings Junction curve in November 1947. The route was abandoned when the connecting curve to Seven Kings West Junction was lifted in 1956, the site of which is occupied by the depot's "New Shed", opened in 1959. Little evidence remains for the junctions at the main line ends.