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    Clapham Junction Railway Station

    3.0 (25 reviews)

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    General view of the tracks to/from Waterloo and Victoria - all 14 of them.
    David J.

    First, let's get the statistics out of the way. Clapham Junction proudly announces that it is the busiest station in Britain, although it is probably the busiest - in terms of the number trains, at least - in Europe, with around 120 trains an hour off-peak, and around 2,000 per day. It's used by 12.5 million passengers a year, with an additional 9.5 million changing trains here, making it the UK's busiest interchange, though of course many more pass through on their way to Waterloo and Victoria. (Though that's still peanuts compared to Tokyo Shinjuku station, with over 3 million passengers per DAY). It is also - by surface area - the largest station in the UK according to the Guinness Book of Records, although this includes quite large areas of track - there are both extensive sidings and a train depot in the angle of the junction. It's actually two stations joined by a subway and a long bridge - platforms 2 to 6 servicing the lines to Richmond (and the service to Willesden Junction) and the rest servicing the lines to Balham out of Victoria and Wimbledon out of Waterloo. All trains from Waterloo pass through here, although not all stop. All the Brighton and South Coast trains, and local services via Balham from Victoria also pass through, all but the Gatwick express stopping. In addition, the services from Watford and Willesden Junctions on the West London line use platforms 2, 16 and 17. Although the first line through the area, from Nine Elms in Vauxhall to Southampton, opened in 1838, the station itself was opened as a junction until 1863, when it was built to link the services from Victoria and Waterloo. Expanded over the years, there are now two entrances, both from the subway: one at the north end onto Grant Road, and the small bus station, and the main one through a small shopping centre onto St John's Hill. Both were rebuilt as part of the station redevelopment in the 1980s and have ticket offices. There used to be another entrance from the footbridge onto St John's Hill, but this has been closed. Architecturally, most of the interest is on the platforms: the wooden buildings from 1863 with their delicate cast-iron decorative canopies decoration on platforms 2-8 on the original 1846 line to Richmond and the fast lines to Wimbledon are the most interesting, and the yellow stock-brick offices on platforms 9 & 10 are well preserved. The best buildings are the old London, Brighton and South Coast Railway Parcel Offices on St John's Hill, in an imposing Edwardian Baroque style, dating from 1910. Needless to say, the new entrance buildings above the shopping centre are hideous - in fact, the station entrance almost seems an afterthought. As a modern station, it has lots of places to get a sandwich or coffee and lots of trains (and people) to watch, but as somewhere I use regularly, I find it less pleasant as a station. The subway is far too narrow for the use it gets, dank and sometimes the roof leaks. The toilets off the subway are small, smelly and seedy. The footbridge, although wider and pleasanter, involves a longer walk to to platforms 2-6 and lots of steps, and both entrances onto platform 17 are hopelessly narrow. And litter on the tracks seems to be a perennial problem at this station. In fact, steps are what Clapham Junction is all about: between 28 and 40 to every platform, making it hopelessly inaccessible for wheelchair users, those with pushchairs, prams and heavy luggage. There are no passengers lifts or escalators. Wandsworth Borough Council has published a ten-point plan to improve facilities at the station, including better services, a link to the underground, reopening the St John's Hill entrance and installing lifts to the platforms. Two recent saving graces have been the installation of electronic ticket machines by South West Trains (which seem to work), and the new information system, which at least tells you whether trains are on time or not - important for me as I make the run from platform 12 to platform 2 to make my 4 minute connection. before that, there was simply a poster indicating 'Platforms 2 or 17' for my local station, West Brompton, which was about as unhelpful as you could get. Time for another major makeover, I think.

    Brian H.

    Clapham Junction railway station is a major railway station and transport hub near St John's Hill in the south-west of Battersea in the London Borough of Wandsworth. Although it is in Battersea, the area around the station is commonly identified as Clapham Junction. Routes from London's south and south-west termini, London Waterloo and London Victoria, funnel through the station making it one of the busiest in Europe by number of trains using it, 100-180 per hour save for the five hours after midnight. The station is also the busiest UK station for interchanges between services

    Qype User (theduc…)

    This is Europe's buisest railway station with a train almost every 2 minutes. Locations vary from destinations like Exeter, Manchester, Cardiff to the more local Wimbledon or Vauxhall. Actually located in Battersea, it was named Clapham Junction as Battersea was not an attractive area in the 1860s when the station was conceived as a junction stop of trains out of London Waterloo and London Victoria. There are plenty of shops and places for coffee, almost one on every platform and two entraces, one with a shopping centre and the other is deviod of anything really. Can I reccommend using the walkway above the platforms as you can see if you next train comes in and the views accross London are one fo the favourite parts to my day as you can see from the pictures uploaded. So here is the full run down.... Platform 1 - Closed, but might be used for London underground in future Platform 2 - London Overground services to Willesden Junction, Kensington Olympia and West Brompton Platform 3 - 6 are for London Waterloo to Windsor, Richmond, Reading, Twickenham, Ascot and Hounslow Platform 7-8 are for long distance services to and from London Waterloo to Portsmouth, Southampton, Bournemouth, New Forest and Weymouth Platforms 9-10 for London Waterloo and Vauxhall Platform 11 for suburban services to Gulidford, Epsom and Woking all stopping at Wimbledon Platform 12 for London Victoria Platform 13 for Sussex, Brighton and East Croydon Platform 14 for London Victoria Platform 15 for Sutton, South London destinations like Balham, Streatham and Epsom Downs Platform 16 and 17 - for trains to Watford Junction, Rugby, Northampton and Gatwick Airport

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    5 years ago

    The lady working on platform 11 was very disrespectful , I asked her for help she was busy pressing her phone .

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    9 years ago

    Random platform announcements, disorganised, very rarely does anyone know where trains are leaving from.

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    16 years ago

    Clapham Junction is the Heart of Battersea, and definitely NOT in Clapham

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    Review Highlights - Clapham Junction Railway Station

    I feel like there is decent signage, the key is to research ahead of time what platform you are arriving on and where you need to go next.

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    Paddington London - :')

    Paddington London

    4.1(148 reviews)
    3.6 miPaddington

    This iconic train station was actually the first station I arrived at during my first British…read moreadventure. I have since passed through many times in the last 3.5 years and it is still magnificent. The architecture is very grandiose and picture-worthy. It is relatively easy to navigate; if I can do it as a tourist, I'm confident most can figure it out ;) The toilets (bathrooms) are a bit hidden. You need to go down a set of stairs for the ladies. The wallpaper reminded me of 2006 Victoria's Secret, and the doors are floor to ceiling offering the most privacy of any public restroom I have been in. The entire station is ridiculously clean compared to any US train or bus station I have traveled through. There are many options for coffee and food, as well as a mini M&S and Tesco Express.... Tesco Express meal deal for less than £4 cannot be beat!!! 5 stars for convince, cleanliness, friendliness, and Tesco Express.

    Paddington Station is huge. You can get almost anywhere in London from here. Lots of shops and…read moreplaces to eat are in the station. Two groceries are in the station, which makes it very convenient to pick some things up. A hotel is in the renovated older part of the station. It has a direct entrance rate into Paddington Station. This is a good location to stay. Lots of hotels in different price range ranges are within a 5 to 10 minute walk shopping and restaurants are all set within a 5 to 10 minute walk.

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    Clapham Junction Railway Station - trainstations - Updated June 2026

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