Travel News

Euston has a problem that only HS2 can solve

Simon Calder’s Travel

What stretches from platform 4 to platform 12 at one of the UK’s busiest stations? It’s Europe’s “largest indoor digital OOH screen” (OOH stands for Out-Of-Home, which it certainly is) at London Euston station. Until Friday it was probably the single most valuable advertising site in Britain. But now, just nine months after its installation, the plug has been pulled by Network Rail.

The decision to go from dazzling graphics to a darker shade of black was the first demand in a five-point review into the passenger experience at the terminus ordered by the transport secretary, Louise Haigh.

Euston is arguably the most important station in the country. On the West Coast main line, Avanti West Coast provides the principal rail connection between the capital and four of the UK’s greatest cities: Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool and Glasgow. In addition, London Overground and London Northwestern serve the northwest suburbs and Home Counties. Not forgetting the Caledonian Sleeper operation to the Scottish lowlands and highlands.

With such complexity, clear and timely information is essential – rather than sensory overload from unsolicited ultra-widescreen messages.

I’ll class the decluttering as an easy win (except for the taxpayer, who will be called upon to make up for the revenue lost by Network Rail). Since the switch-off, detecting the next departure for Leighton Buzzard feels slightly less of a challenge.

But points two to five inclusive look tougher. They are intended to tackle the “high levels of overcrowding” that are “putting passengers in danger” – according to the transport watchdog London TravelWatch.

The key problem: when the rebuilt station was opened by the Queen in 1968, the railways were in long-term decline. Planners predicted no more than 30,000 passengers a day would use Euston. Instead, passenger numbers have almost trebled.

During disruption, crowds build quickly and surge towards the ticket barriers when the secret is revealed about whether the Manchester Piccadilly train will depart from platform 1 or 16 – often with just a few minutes’ warning.

Watching from the mezzanine above the concourse, this phenomenon can be alarming. London TravelWatch said that as a result of “last-minute announcements, staff appear overwhelmed by the sheer numbers of people”.

Ms…

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