The Anonymous Widower

Sorting Out Highbury Corner And Highbury And Islington Station

Highbury Corner is an important transport hub in Islington, where traffic from the City starts to squeeze up the A1 to get North. It also contains the important but badly-designed rail station of Highbury and Islington. This Google Earth image shows the area.

Highbury Corner

Highbury Corner

Note the green space named as Highbury Island in the middle of the junction with traffic going all the way round in both directions.

The road leading off to the North West (top-left) is the A1, which goes up the Holloway Road to Archway, which is another major junction, that needs a good sorting. The road leading to the East is St. Paul’s Road, which leads to the Balls Pond Road and Dalston Junction. The roads leading to the south from the island are extremely congested at all times and all the way to the Angel and Old Street respectively. They are the sort of roads, that make me glad, I don’t drive any more.

The junction is a pedestrian’s nightmare, as you are constantly crossing busy roads on light-controlled crossings.

What I find particularly difficult is that to get from the stop where buses from my house arrive in St.Paul’s Road to Highbury and Islington station involves two road crossings. It’s so tiresome, that often if I need the Victoria or Northern City Line at the station, I’ll walk to Dalston Junction station and get the North London Line for two stops. Coming home, I’ll get the North London Line back to Dalston Junction and then get any of four buses back towards Highbury Corner to my house.

It’s not quicker, but it’s certainly easier and definitely more pleasant in bad weather.

This illustrates how bad Highbury Corner is for buses, which like the vehicle routes need a very good sorting.

Add to this that Highbury and Islington station is a dreadful 1960s station, that has inadequate access to the two deep lines. To be fair though, access to the four London Overground platforms is a lot better. I have written before that there could also be access to these platforms from the other end, but that may well happen, when a new station is developed.

At the present time, work is ongoing to clear the area in front of the station, by removing the old Post Office, before the main bridge that carries the A1 over the railway is replaced.

In July 2004, Islington Council produced a planning framework for the area. It is packed full of information and some worthwhile proposals.

It suggests the following.

1. Giving public access to Highbury Island and turning it into a green oasis with facilities.

2. Proposals to simplify the traffic flows, with a strong hint, that traffic on the Western side of the Highbury island be closed off.

3. In the rebuilding of the station, it says that building could incorporate extensive development over the North London Line tracks for residential or other purposes.

4. Using the old Highbury and Islington station on the North side of the junction to create a new access for escalators and lifts to the lines deep under the station.

The report also told me, the purpose of the strange elliptical building on the north side of the North London Line, which is at the top-right of the Google image. It’s the vent shaft for the Channel Tunnel Rail Link.

Hopefully, in the next few years, we’ll see the sorting out of the area.

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April 12, 2015 - Posted by | Transport/Travel | , ,

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