The Anonymous Widower

After Overground – Edmonton Green – 31st May 2015

When I visited Edmonton Green Station some time ago, it was in the process of being updated with lifts.

As the pictures show it is one of the first stations on the Lea Valley Lines other than the totally flat Enfield Town, to be updated to full step-free access.

This page on the Enfield Council web site, says how the station rebuilding was financed and the problems encountered in the design and building.

The Council are working in partnership with Network Rail to deliver two lifts at Edmonton Green Station to enable step free access to both Platforms 1 and 2.

The Council has been awarded £850k for the project following a successful bid for funding from the Department for Transport’s Access for All programme. However, the total cost of the project is estimated to be £2m and the balance of funding is being provided by the Council, utilising a mixture of contributions from nearby development schemes and grant funding from Transport for London .

The construction of the lifts provides many challenges because of the constrained nature of the site, the need to cater for passengers throughout the works and the fixed budget.

In addition, the station is at the heart of Edmonton Green and within a Conservation area, so it needs to be of good design. The focus at present is therefore trying to find the optimum design solution for the lift shafts, given all of the above constraints.

It looks like it was challenging.

I think it illustrates that the cost of putting two lifts into a conservation area and making sure that the station is acceptable to all parties is a couple of million. Good building isn’t cheap.

But at least Edmonton Green is now a station with platforms that look like they’ll take eight car trains and possibly twelve-car ones if needed.

Obviously details like handrails and information displays need to be updated and the station needs a good clean and a paint, but it shouldn’t need much expensive work for the next decade or two.

It can certainly be used as a standard to which all stations on the Lea Valley Lines can aspire.

May 31, 2015 - Posted by | Uncategorized | , ,

2 Comments »

  1. But if you walk under Church Street Bridge you still got a good chance of pigeon droppings all over your best suit to work , yuk!!

    Comment by robert hingston | June 8, 2015 | Reply

  2. But if you walk under Church Street Bridge next to Edmonton Green station you still got a good chance of pigeon droppings all over your best suit to work , yuk!

    Comment by robert hingston | June 8, 2015 | Reply


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