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|closed = 31 August 2019
|closed = 31 August 2019
|operator = [[London Underground]]
|operator = [[London Underground]]
}}Edgware Road (prefix OP) is a signal cabin located within the station of the same name on the [[Circle line|Circle]], [[District line|District]] and [[Hammersmith & City line|Hammersmith & City]] lines of [[London Underground]]’s Sub-Surface Railway. Brought into use in 1926, it was the oldest working signal cabin on a metro system in the world at closure in 2019 as part the [[Four Lines Modernisation]] (4LM) re-signalling programme.  
}}Edgware Road (prefix OP) is a signal cabin located within the station of the same name on the [[Circle line|Circle]], [[District line|District]] and [[Hammersmith & City line|Hammersmith & City]] lines of [[London Underground]]’s Sub-Surface Railway. Brought into use on 10 October 1926, it was the oldest operational signal cabin on a metro transit system in the world by the time of its closure on 31 August 2019 as part the [[Four Lines Modernisation]] (4LM) re-signalling programme.  
 
== Metropolitan Railway ==
== Metropolitan Railway ==
Edgware Road was part of the first section of the [[Metropolitan Railway]] (MR) between Paddington and Farringdon on 10 January 1863.<ref>Edwards, Dennis; Pigram, Ron (1988). The Golden Years of the Metropolitan Railway and the Metro-land Dream. Bloomsbury. p. 32. <nowiki>ISBN 1-870630-11-4</nowiki>.</ref> The original MR station at Edgware Road was a two-track station with the original signal box (prefix C) of 30 levers provided. This controlled Praed Street Junction to the west which split the lines of the Great Western Railway towards Hammersmith from those of the Metropolitan heading towards High Street Kensington.  The MR also had a series of locomotive sheds servicing the motive power that worked the service in the years before electrification began in 1903.<ref>Simpson, Bill (2003). A History of the Metropolitan Railway. Vol 1. Lamplight Publications. <nowiki>ISBN 1-899246-07-X</nowiki>.</ref>
Edgware Road is located on the oldest section of underground metro in the world dating from the opening of the [[Metropolitan Railway]] (MR) between Paddington and Farringdon on 10 January 1863.<ref>Edwards, Dennis; Pigram, Ron (1988). The Golden Years of the Metropolitan Railway and the Metro-land Dream. Bloomsbury. p. 32. <nowiki>ISBN 1-870630-11-4</nowiki>.</ref> The original MR station at Edgware Road was a two-track station with the original signal box (prefix C) of 30 levers provided. This controlled Praed Street Junction to the west which split the lines of the Great Western Railway towards Hammersmith from those of the Metropolitan heading towards High Street Kensington.  The MR also had a series of locomotive sheds housing the steam locomotives that worked the service in the years before electrification from 1903 onwards.<ref>Simpson, Bill (2003). A History of the Metropolitan Railway. Vol 1. Lamplight Publications. <nowiki>ISBN 1-899246-07-X</nowiki>.</ref>
 
One of the unintended consequences of the early proliferation of underground railway lines by the MR was the capacity limitations caused by lack of route segregation. The MR had planned to construct relief lines between Edgware Road and Kilburn to relive two track section of railway between Baker Street and Finchley Road, by then a notorious bottle neck with no fewer than four separate service patterns all vying for access. In 1926, Edgware Road station was rebuilt into its current layout of a four-track layout in anticipation of those relief lines with the signal cabin (prefix B, later OP) suitably re-equipped with the Westinghouse ‘K style’ frame of 39 electrically interlocked miniature levers that would remain with the cabin for the rest of its operational life. Government legislation regarding the safety standards of locomotive hauled rolling stock would eventually render the MRs proposed extension economically unfeasible and the plan was subsequently dropped.<ref>Jackson, Alan (1986). London's Metropolitan Railway. David & Charles. <nowiki>ISBN 0-7153-8839-8</nowiki>.</ref>


One of the consequences of the early proliferation of lines by the MR was the capacity limitations caused by lack of route segregation. The MR had planned to construct relief lines between Edgware Road and Kilburn to relive two track section of railway between Baker Street and Finchley Road, by then a notorious bottle neck with no fewer than four separate service patterns all vying for access. In 1926, Edgware Road station was rebuilt into its current layout of a four-track layout in anticipation of those relief lines with the signal cabin (prefix B, later OP) suitably re-equipped with the Westinghouse ‘K style’ frame of 39 electrically interlocked miniature levers that would remain with the cabin for the rest of its operational life. Government legislation regarding the safety standards of locomotive hauled rolling stock would eventually render the MRs proposed extension economically unfeasible and the plan was subsequently dropped.<ref>Jackson, Alan (1986). London's Metropolitan Railway. David & Charles. <nowiki>ISBN 0-7153-8839-8</nowiki>.</ref>
== London Transport ==
== London Transport ==
It would take until 1939 with the New Works Programme enacted by the London Passenger Transport Board (LTPB) to fulfil the ambition of relieving the tracks between Baker Street and Finchley Road in the form of the Bakerloo line. Running in newly constructed Deep Tube tunnels between Baker Street and Finchley Road, the Bakerloo line took over MR services to Stanmore providing the service segregation that had always been absent from the MR’s original plans due to the ad-hoc nature of its expansion.<ref>Rose, Douglas (1999) [1980]. The London Underground, A Diagrammatic History (7th ed.). Douglas Rose/Capital Transport. <nowiki>ISBN 1-85414-219-4</nowiki>.</ref> Whilst the now expanded Edgware Road never saw its intended use come to fruition, it remained a pivotal area of the Sub-Surface Railway with the through services of the Circle and Metropolitan lines, terminating District line services and substantial goods traffic from the Great Western Railway through to Billingsgate market near Farringdon.
It would take until 1939 with the New Works Programme enacted by the London Passenger Transport Board (LTPB) to fulfil the ambition of relieving the tracks between Baker Street and Finchley Road in the form of the Bakerloo line. Running in newly constructed Deep Tube tunnels between Baker Street and Finchley Road, the Bakerloo line took over MR services to Stanmore providing the service segregation that had always been absent from the MR’s original plans due to the ad-hoc nature of its expansion.<ref>Rose, Douglas (1999) [1980]. The London Underground, A Diagrammatic History (7th ed.). Douglas Rose/Capital Transport. <nowiki>ISBN 1-85414-219-4</nowiki>.</ref> Whilst the now expanded Edgware Road never saw its intended use come to fruition, it remained a pivotal area of the Sub-Surface Railway with the through services of the Circle and Metropolitan lines, terminating District line services and substantial goods traffic from the Great Western Railway through to Billingsgate market near Farringdon.
=== Signal Concentration Schemes ===
=== Signal Concentration Schemes ===
Up until the 1960’s, the tried and accepted way of controlling signals and points was by installing signal cabins and lever frames wherever manual control of a route was needed for example at terminal stations or diverging junctions. Whilst experiments by Westinghouse Brake and Signalling company on the Piccadilly line in the 1940’s with automatic junction working had yielded desirable results, signal concentration was someway off, and cabins commissioned into the late 1950’s remained small in terms of geographic area covered.
Up until the 1960’s, the tried and accepted way of controlling signals and points was by installing signal cabins and lever frames wherever manual control of a route was needed for example at terminal stations or diverging junctions. Whilst experiments by Westinghouse Brake and Signalling company on the Piccadilly line in the 1940’s with automatic junction working had yielded desirable results, signal concentration was someway off, and cabins commissioned into the late 1950’s remained small in terms of geographic area covered.
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In the late 1980’s, Baker Street control room began to absorb signalling control of the Jubilee, Metropolitan and Circle lines starting with the Jubilee in 1986. It had originally been envisaged that Baker Street would eventually replace Edgware Road signal cabin as well take over signalling for the entirety of the Metropolitan line from its remaining signal cabins. However, financial constraints brought a premature end to this programme and as a result, the enabling works that put Edgware Road on the display panels at Baker Street control room would never be brought into use.
In the late 1980’s, Baker Street control room began to absorb signalling control of the Jubilee, Metropolitan and Circle lines starting with the Jubilee in 1986. It had originally been envisaged that Baker Street would eventually replace Edgware Road signal cabin as well take over signalling for the entirety of the Metropolitan line from its remaining signal cabins. However, financial constraints brought a premature end to this programme and as a result, the enabling works that put Edgware Road on the display panels at Baker Street control room would never be brought into use.
== Four Lines Modernisation (4LM) ==
== Four Lines Modernisation (4LM) ==
In 2011, Bombardier were awarded the contract for re-signalling the entirety of the Sub-Surface Railway as part of a project called Sub-Surface Upgrade Programme (SSUG) utilising Distance-To-Go-Radio (DTGR) similar to that used on the Victoria line. However, Bombardiers relative inexperience in this field quickly started to pull SSUG behind schedule and London Underground subsequently terminated the contract in 2013.<ref>"[https://www.railjournal.com/financial/london-underground-and-bombardier-abandon-tube-signalling-contract/ London Underground and Bombardier abandon Tube signalling contract]". International Railway Journal. 3 January 2014.</ref> In 2015, Thales won the re-tendered contract for Sub-Surface Railway re-signalling using Communication Based Train Control (CBTC), a variant of SelTrac. As a result of the re-tendering process, the target date of completion for the project slipped a minimum of five years and an extra £900m.
In 2011, Bombardier were awarded the contract for re-signalling the entirety of the Sub-Surface Railway as part of a project called Sub-Surface Upgrade Programme (SSUG) utilising Distance-To-Go-Radio (DTGR) similar to that used on the Victoria line. However, Bombardiers relative inexperience in this field quickly started to pull SSUG behind schedule and London Underground subsequently terminated the contract in 2013.<ref>"[https://www.railjournal.com/financial/london-underground-and-bombardier-abandon-tube-signalling-contract/ London Underground and Bombardier abandon Tube signalling contract]". International Railway Journal. 3 January 2014.</ref> In 2015, Thales won the re-tendered contract for Sub-Surface Railway re-signalling using Communication Based Train Control (CBTC), a variant of SelTrac. As a result of the re-tendering process, the target date of completion for the project slipped a minimum of five years and an extra £900m.
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==The Future==
==The Future==
Following the closure of Edgware Road cabin in September 2019, custodianship has passed to the [[London Transport Museum]], with the long term aim of incorporating the space into the Museum's [[Hidden London]] programme exploring disused Tube spaces. The cabin featured in [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ay_e8i_a5tg an episode of the Hidden London 'Hangouts'] in May 2021, with the final operator, Charlotte Monroe, returning to the cabin for the first time since closure.
Following the closure of Edgware Road cabin in September 2019, custodianship has passed to the [[London Transport Museum]], with the long term aim of incorporating the space into the Museum's [[Hidden London]] programme exploring disused Tube spaces. The cabin featured in [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ay_e8i_a5tg an episode of the Hidden London 'Hangouts'] in May 2021, with the final operator, Charlotte Monroe, returning to the cabin for the first time since closure.
== References ==
== References ==
[[Category:London Underground]] [[Category:Signal cabins]]
[[Category:London Underground]] [[Category:Signal cabins]]
<references />
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