Leslie Green
Leslie William Green was an English architect. He is best known for his design of iconic stations constructed on the London Underground railway system in central London during the first decade of the 20th century, with distinctive oxblood red tiled façades including pillars and semi-circular first-floor windows, and patterned tiled interiors.
Early and private life
Green was born in Maida Vale, London in 1875, the second of four children of architect and Crown Surveyor Arthur Green and his wife Emily. He spent periods studying at Dover College and South Kensington School of Art, and in Paris, between periods working as an assistant in his father's architectural practice.Green married Mildred Ethel Wildy in Clapham in April 1902. In 1904, they had a daughter, Vera.
Career
Green established his own practice as an architect in 1897, working initially from his father's offices, before moving to Haymarket in 1900 and then to Adelphi House on Adam Street, by the Strand, in 1903. He became an associate of the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1898, and a member in 1899. Early commissions included works to homes and shops in various parts of the capital city.In 1903 he was appointed as architect for the Underground Electric Railways Company of London to design stations for three underground railway lines then under construction – the Great Northern, Piccadilly and Brompton Railway, the Baker Street and Waterloo Railway and the Charing Cross, Euston and Hampstead Railway, which, respectively, became parts of the present day Piccadilly line, Bakerloo line and Northern line. Green was commissioned to design 50 new stations, including their external appearance, and internal fittings and decoration.
Green developed a uniform Arts and Crafts style for the ground level station buildings, adapted to suit the individual station location. They were constructed as two-storey buildings with a structural steel frame – then a new form of construction recently imported from the United States – providing the large internal spaces needed for ticket halls and lift shafts. The exterior elevations were clad in non-loadbearing ox-blood red glazed terracotta blocks, provided by the Leeds Fireclay Company. The ground floor was divided into wide bays by columns, allowing separate entrances and exits, and also providing space for retail outlets. The design also featured large semi-circular windows at first floor level and a heavy dentilated cornice above. A broad strip between the two floors announced the name of the station in capital letters. The station buildings were constructed with flat roofs with the deliberate aim of encouraging commercial office development above, another benefit of the load-bearing structural steel frame.
The interior was tiled in green and white, with decorative details. At platform level, the stations were provided with a standardised tiling design incorporating the station name, but with quickly identified individual colour schemes and geometric tile patterns formed in repeating panels along the platform length. Directional signs were also included in the tile designs. The tiled surfaces created a unifying theme, and proved easy to maintain.
The railways were to open in 1906 and 1907, and Green was notified in June 1907 that the contract would be terminated at the end of that year. He was elected a Fellow of the RIBA in 1907, including details of his work for the UERL as part of his submission.
Many of Green's station buildings survive, although internal modifications have seen most of his ticket hall designs altered to suit later developments. At platform levels a number of the original tiling schemes survive today or have, as at Lambeth North and Marylebone, been reproduced in recent years to the original pattern. A number of the surviving buildings are Grade II listed buildings: Aldwych, Belsize Park, Caledonian Road, Chalk Farm, Covent Garden, Gloucester Road, Holloway Road, Oxford Circus, Mornington Crescent, Russell Square and South Kensington. His work was continued by his assistant, Stanley Heaps. The designs remain instantly recognisable: the screen appearance of the fictitious Walford East Underground station from the BBC soap opera EastEnders is inspired by Green's designs.
Leslie Green stations
Bakerloo lineStations between Edgware Road and Elephant & Castle inclusive constructed by BS&WR with station buildings designed by Leslie Green:
- Edgware Road – separate building from the District, Circle or Hammersmith & City lines station
- Great Central – now Marylebone. The original building was destroyed in WWII.
- Baker Street – demolished
- Regent's Park – accessed via a subway and never had a surface building
- Oxford Circus
- Piccadilly Circus – rebuilt in the 1920s, demolished in the 1990s
- Trafalgar Square - now Charing Cross, never had a station building
- Embankment - never had a station building
- Waterloo – rebuilt in the 1950s
- Kennington Road – renamed Lambeth North in 1918
- Elephant & Castle – South London House built over the station in 1907
Stations between Finsbury Park and Gloucester Road inclusive constructed by GNP&BR with station buildings designed by Leslie Green:
- Gillespie Road – now Arsenal, rebuilt in the 1930s
- Holloway Road
- Caledonian Road
- York Road – station closed in 1932, but building remains
- King's Cross – demolished
- Russell Square
- Holborn The original station façades on Kingsway and High Holborn were uniquely of granite but were destroyed by 1930s replacements. The adjacent façades at ground and first floor of the building in which the station is situated were built to the same design using Portland stone.
- Strand – renamed Aldwych in 1915. Station closed in 1994, but building remains and has been restored to close to original appearance
- Covent Garden
- Leicester Square
- Piccadilly Circus - rebuilt in the 1920s, building demolished in the 1990s
- Dover Street – entrance relocated in the 1930s, building demolished in the 1960s and station renamed Green Park.
- Down Street – station closed in 1932, but building remains
- Hyde Park Corner – building no longer used as station access
- Knightsbridge - entrance relocated and main entrance demolished; facade of rear entrance at corner of Basil Street and Hoopers Court remained after new entrance was built and is incorporated into another building
- Brompton Road – station closed in 1934 and mostly demolished although the side elevation remains
- South Kensington - entrance not in use
- Gloucester Road - entrance not in use
Stations between Hampstead and Archway and Strand inclusive constructed by CCE&HR with station buildings designed by Leslie Green:
- Highgate - now Archway, demolished
- Tufnell Park
- Kentish Town
- South Kentish Town – station closed in 1924 but building remains.
- Golders Green
- Hampstead
- Belsize Park
- Chalk Farm
- Camden Town
- Mornington Crescent
- Euston – surface building no longer used to access station; due to be demolished for the construction of new Euston mainline station
- Euston Road – now Warren Street, rebuilt in the 1930s
- Tottenham Court Road – not the current station of that name. Renamed Goodge Street in 1908.
- Oxford Street - now Tottenham Court Road, never had a station building
- Leicester Square
- Charing Cross - never had a surface building
Death