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Liverpool Street station platforms

Liverpool Street Station

Liverpool Street

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Cast iron glories at a station
Liverpool Street Station

The fine roof trapped steam and smoke making the station a dirty place. Now most trains are electric and the station became light and airy once it was modernised in 1992.

Liverpool Street station concourseLiverpool Street station opened in 1874 to provide the Great Eastern railway company with a replacement for its inconvenient terminus in Bishopsgate.
 
One of the glories of the station is its roof which was designed by the railway companies Chief Engineer, Edward Wilson. The roof was built by designed and built by the Fairburn Engineering Company which also supplied the roof for the Royal Albert Hall.

Submitted by: Andrew Hunt, 21 January 2007

Find out what Network Rail has to say about the station. There are more pictures of Liverpool Street station and its roof on the internet and you can see the station as it looked in 1950.
 
The web site of Wortley Top Forge Industrial Museum has pages explaining how cast iron is made and how it differs from steel and wrought iron.

See also: Civil engineering Transport

Project sponsors:

City sponsors:
ASE London Region
Nuffiled Curriculum Centre