Monday 14 October 2013

The London Underground

Suddenly everyone is getting the Underground…but not to the very end. 

   I see that Messrs Martin and…Z(?)…caught the tube the other day. To go a gig at the 02.  Their gig. Apparently this was amazing (because this sort of thing is considered beyond the intellect of most famouses, presumably) and shows how down-to-Earth they are. Quite. I imagine them, and their significant entourages, topping up their Oyster cards after queueing up for 20 minutes at the only working ticket machine in the over-crowded rush-hour concourse of Liverpool Street. How normal they are.

   Anyway, as a genuine passenger of the tube, I've been exploring the network from end-to-end for the past few weeks. My project to document the last station on each of the lines is well underway. I've been to the quiet, rural town of Chesham (northern Metropolitan Line),  explored the hustle and bustle of Brixton's markets (southern Victoria Line) and been out into deepest Essex, to the town of Upminster, at the end of the District Line.

   The London Underground is a vast network with over 270 stations and its lines covering hundreds of miles in total. Each of the 11 underground lines has at least two termini, with  the majority of lines having many more. Most people only experience this world-famous underground railway system within the confines of central London, where they feed the tourist sites and businesses that fuel London. And it rips ignorant tourists off, partly thanks to Harry Beck's geography-defying map resulting in thousands of unnecessary journeys (Leicester Square to Covent Garden being the most infamous of these).

   But venture farther afield, and you'll see the types of passenger change, the numbers dwindle, the tunnels open out into vast suburbs or rolling fields and hills; and experience the strange sensation of reaching the point at which the train can go no further. It is here that I am going; spending roughly one hour exploring the square mile around the station. One hour may not sound like much time, nor one square mile (roughly) sound like a huge area, but the purpose of this decision is to contrast it with the termination of the train's journey. The train spends most of its day rushing between stations, so when it finally comes to a halt, it seems only fitting to carry on that rushed attitude on foot. Besides, even out in the distant suburbs of Greater London, a lot happens within one hour and one square mile. 

   There is also a logistical aspect to limiting my time to one hour and a reasonably small distance: the volume of images. With so many destinations, it would simply be overwhelming to spend indefinite amounts of time at each terminus. One hour limits my picture-taking to a specific time-frame, meaning I capture a small glimpse of life at the terminus, and preserve it in images. Obviously, there are drawbacks to this approach, such as missing events or arriving somewhere when something unusual happens to be taking place, but at the same time doing this helps to focus what is otherwise a huge undertaking. The authenticity and realism of the images will not be diminished by the time-scale in which they were produced.

The termini and lines I will eventually have covered are:

Metropolitan Line: Amersham, Chesham, Watford, Uxbridge, Aldgate

Bakerloo Line: Harrow & Wealdstone, Elephant & Castle

Jubilee Line: Stanmore, Stratford

Northern Line: Edgware, Mill Hill East, High Barnet, Morden 

Piccadilly Line: Cockfosters, Heathrow Terminal 5, Uxbridge (shared with Metropolitan Line)

Victoria Line: Walthamstow Central, Brixton

Central Line: Epping, Ealing Broadway (shared with District Line), West Ruislip

District Line: Upminster, Wimbledon, Kensington Olympia, Richmond, Ealing Broadway (shared with Central Line), Edgware Road (shared with Circle Line)

Hammersmith & City Line: Hammersmith (shared with Circle Line), Barking

Waterloo & City: Bank, Waterloo

Circle Line: Edgware Road (shared with District Line), Hammersmith (shared with Hammersmith & City Line

I've highlighted which stations have overlapping termini. These will be treated as a single terminus and the images captured there will represent each line in the finished project.