The former Lord Napier Public House, alongside the westbound platform ramp with a collection of locked bicycles outside |
Each platform had a basic waiting room with a small ticket office on the Eastbound platform and a footbridge linking the two
Hackney Wick station, a few days before the footbridge was demolished |
The plot of land as it was prior to station upgrade construction |
Building work begins |
The completed new ticket hall and station entrance |
During construction White Post Lane was closed directly outside for over a year and became part of the construction area
This caused no issues at all, as this map validates, motor traffic was easily able to divert via Rothbury Road and Hepscott Road with access to all local businesses and Queens Yard car park remaining for those on four wheels. The most impressive engineering feat was the construction of a new underpass under the railway line, built in four days over the Easter Bank Holiday weekend. Although passengers using the station on the Tuesday after it reopened couldn't really tell from Platform level that anything had changed
The newly built underpass under the North London line, constructed in four days last year |
The construction of an underpass under a railway line is such a short space of time is something I've been alerted to several times before, but only ever in the Netherlands
In 3 days a railway underpass for the Cycling highway Cuijk - Nijmegen was constructed by @MobilisTBIinfra This timelapse shows the result! pic.twitter.com/CFrMhUw4Hf— Sjors van Duren (@Sjoess) 25 October 2017
Cycling underpasses under railway lines are a very common sight in the Netherlands, both in rural areas and at train stations themselves
A walking and cycling underpass under Rotterdam Centraal station, built in 2014 as part of the station reconstruction |
A walking and cycling underpass through Amsterdam Centraal station, opened in 2015 |
Utrecht Lunetten station, a view from a bicycle |
However there is no cycling in the new underpass at Hackney Wick station. Just under half of the underpass is currently a link between the only open entrance on White Post Lane and the Eastbound platform
On the other side of the removable glass wall lies what will become a pedestrian route through the station
The closed underpass a few days after the upgraded Hackney Wick station opened. It has since been securely closed with hoardings, presumably to prevent anyone sleeping or spray painting inside |
Almost all buildings either side of the new station will eventually be demolished to create Hackney Wick Central, a new mixed use neighbourhood with a pedestrianised north-south route surrounded by retail units, all animated as either coffee or bike shops in the visualisations pinned to the outside of the station
The route of the new pedestrianised road which will run through the station |
From the Eastbound platform you can view where the new pedestrian route will run, with most of the warehouses soon to be replaced by flats and retail units |
It'll also link up with the cycle and footbridge from Wallis Road into the Olympic Park, part of quietway 6, and will allow residents of East Wick quicker access to their local station. It is of course entirely possible that cycling will be allowed through this underpass and along this route once it opens, however it would clearly be better for everyone if a cycle track was built to clearly separate walking and cycling, rather than a shared space design
However this is the LLDC who are not very keen on creating cycle routes but are keen on "cyclists dismount" signs, so it is unlikely this will become a walking and cycling route.
As for cycle parking there are currently seven new bike stands outside the new entrance on White Post Lane with another inaccessible eight behind fencing at the, as yet unopened, northern entrance. The current seven stands are clearly nowhere near enough as they are always full and were from day one, with lamp posts and railings nearby often used as well. If 15 stands will be the eventual total bike parking at Hackney Wick station then clearly that will be nowhere near enough
Bicycle parking at a bus stop in the suburbs of Amsterdam. With large unused space outside the new station could something like this have been built at Hackney Wick? |
It was disappointing to see that as soon as the new station opened so did White Post Lane following a closure of more than a year, despite being a little used road and alternative routes for through motor traffic in the area. This would have been a great opportunity to filter it directly in front of the station and create a new public space and improve the safety of those leaving the station on foot
The new Hackney Wick station, with on street car parking retained directly outside |
Pedestrian activity will increase here considerably in the near future, with huge apartment blocks very close to the station nearing completion and even bigger ones still going through the planning process. However Hackney Wick will also be the local station for residential areas such as East Wick and Sweetwater in the Olympic Park and the developments under construction on Fish Island which will all be a good 10 to 15 minute walk away. Hackney Wick is also my local station and is at least a 10 minute walk; I usually do walk it but on occasions use the bike, especially if I know I'll be coming back with shopping and a child which is much easier to transport home from the station by bike than on foot. I suspect many residents in the North of the Olympic Park will prefer a short bike ride home from the station, rather than a longer walk too.
As a local resident I'm grateful for the station upgrade and it is a stunning addition to the area but I can't help feel this was a missed opportunity not to create new cycling routes. Meanwhile the next time you see a Dutch video of a new cycling underpass being built over the course of a weekend please remember we can also do that in the UK too, we just choose not to.
No comments:
Post a Comment