HOW THE LONDON UNDERGROUND SHAPED LONDON University of Oxford July 24, 2013 Jim Mukerjee
May 29, 2015
HOW THE LONDON UNDERGROUNDSHAPED LONDON
University of Oxford July 24, 2013 Jim Mukerjee
CONCLUSIONS
• Victorian period generated intense scientific curiosity, technical innovation and sense of power & confidence
• The London Underground can be “regarded as the greatest engineering triumph of the day”
• The Underground remains the lifeblood of London today and will be ever more vital in future
• Underground = London
A Tale of Trains, Technology & Talent
• Railway Mania of the 1840s • Birth of the UNDERGROUND• How was the UNDERGROUND Built?• Social Impact of the UNDERGROUND• Visionaries, PR and Corporate Branding
Agenda
Railway Mania of the 1840s• London: largest and most prosperous city in the world in mid-19th
century; capital of the British Empire!• Narrow congested streets with horse-drawn traffic and pedestrians
created gridlock; Need for connecting main railway stations with the City
• Royal Commission on Metropolitan Railway Termini formed in 1846• Stations to be located at edge of city; Paddington, Euston and King’s
Cross stations; surface connections to the City in central London banned
• The Underground: an idea whose time has come• Many competing proposals across London with new routes in laissez-
faire development climate
Birth Of The UNDERGROUND• ~ 250K people journeyed to work every day• Charles Pearson, City of London Solicitor, proposed Railways as part
of larger transportation plan• Metropolitan Railway under New Road approved by parliament in
1854, John Fowler, Chief Engineer• January 9, 1863, Metropolitan Railway opens first Underground
service from Paddington to Farringdon Street station• Immediate success: 40K passengers took 18 min journey on first day
in three different classes of service; Metropolitan Railway profitable in first year
Metropolitan Railway OpeningJanuary 9, 1863
Construction of the Underground• Construction started in 1860; took 2 years to complete 3½ miles; “cut and
cover” design ( re: London Transport Museum model)• Innovation lay in covering the tunnel roof and laying the road back over the top
to support the traffic• Major concern below ground: water-mains, main/branch sewers and pipes, gas
mains, telegraph wires – “full of veins and arteries”• Most technical hurdles solved by hands-on trial and error rather than detailed
pre-planning, design and engineering blueprints• Employed 2,000 “navvies”, 200 horses, 58 steam cranes, huge kilns @ Earl’s
Court for 140M baked bricks• Steam trains created a smoky, uncomfortable atmosphere no matter what
precautions were taken; Board of Trade inquiry in 1887: advent of Electric Traction
• First deep-level electric “Tube” Railway opened in 1890 between Stockwell and King William Street stations
Construction of First Underground Metropolitan Railway Line
First Underground Poster by John Hassell, 1908
Social Impact of the Underground
• Underground’s popularity due to revolutionized speed of travel and excellent safety record ; no explosions due to flammable gases as feared; modern interlocking signals and controls
• Outward expansion opened lucrative suburban market: service “Metro-Land” housing development and “Homes fit for Heroes” for returning WW I and WW II veterans
• Short trips around town for Victorians for socializing, shopping, recreation, night-life, entertainment
• Maintain as normal a service as possible during WW II: reassuring symbol of confidence, resilience, and national pride
• Overall, between 1850 and 1900, as many as 100,000 Londoners lost their homes to railway construction
Development of London suburbs
Underground for All Reasons
Underground Shelter During Blitz Sept 25, 1940
Public Notice during Blitz
Visionaries, PR, Corporate Branding• Charles Tyson Yerkes, American entrepreneur, swindler, saviour of the London
Underground• Albert Stanley (Lord Ashfield), first Chairman of London Transport, MD of
Underground Group (UG) in 1910• Frank Pick, Commercial Mgr and MD of UG in 1920, first CEO of LT in 1933
– Legendary for use of Graphic Art, Branding & Administrative skills– Philosophy of Design Institute: “Fitness for purpose”– Inspiration for Corporate Branding: Underground Posters since 1908
• Edward Johnston, accomplished calligrapher, designer of iconic Underground Roundel logo in 1913
• Charles Holden, architect of Piccadilly & West End stations, LT Headquarters @ 55 Broadway in 1929: “simplicity with grandeur”
• Harry Beck, Draughtsman in LT, designer of iconic Underground Map in 1931, initially rejected by LT, simple, easy to read and use, public reception was enthusiastic; received 10 guineas for his innovative design, now standard logo of London Underground system map recognized worldwide
Iconic London Underground Map Harry Beck, 1931
Geographical Underground MapMark Noad, LT, 2011
Iconic Underground Roundel LogoNew Johnston Sans Font
Subways are Spreading Fast
The Underground = London
THANK YOU