place

Chessington North railway station

Art Deco architecture in LondonArt Deco railway stationsDfT Category D stationsFormer Southern Railway (UK) stationsJames Robb Scott buildings
London stations without latest usage statistics 1415London stations without latest usage statistics 1516London stations without latest usage statistics 1617Rail transport stations in London fare zone 6Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1939Railway stations in the Royal Borough of Kingston upon ThamesRailway stations served by South Western RailwayUse British English from August 2012
Chessington North railway station, Greater London (geograph 4158526)
Chessington North railway station, Greater London (geograph 4158526)

Chessington North railway station, in the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames in South West London, is on the Chessington branch line and is served by South Western Railway. The station serves Hook as well as the northern part of Chessington. It is 13 miles 25 chains (21.4 km) down the line from London Waterloo; it is in Travelcard Zone 6.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Chessington North railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Chessington North railway station
Bridge Road, London Chessington (Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Chessington North railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.3642 ° E -0.3005 °
placeShow on map

Address

Chessington North

Bridge Road
KT9 2RT London, Chessington (Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames)
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q1934700)
linkOpenStreetMap (3655209318)

Chessington North railway station, Greater London (geograph 4158526)
Chessington North railway station, Greater London (geograph 4158526)
Share experience

Nearby Places

Ace of Spades (junction)

The Ace of Spades junction is in Hook in the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames. It enables the A243 Hook Road to cross and link to the A3 Portsmouth Road, and two sliproads interface with, just west, the London end of the A309 Kingston Bypass which serves Esher and Hampton Court Bridge. It takes its name from a once well-known 1930s roadhouse, a pioneer establishment, serving meals 24 hours a day in a restaurant with seating for up to 800, dancing until 3am, large outdoor swimming pool, a miniature golf course, polo ground, riding school and an airstrip. Acts such as Billie and Renée Houston as well as Collinson and Dean appeared there. Once spotted at the swimming pool was Diana Dors trying to teach her husband Dennis Hamilton to swim. This advanced motel fell into decline, and suffered a fire in 1955. Much of it has become a large tiling and kitchen-selection/parts shop. Its car park covers the former pool, perhaps filled in. Later the Hook Underpass (cutting) was dug, the first underpass of this kind in the country so a model of it was displayed in the Science Museum in London. It initially had road heating (powered by two generators). In the months after opening it attracted motorcyclists keen to ride the underpass at high speed. Today there is a traffic "black spot", during peaks, going northeast before the "underpass". The road reduces from three lanes to two. The speed limit reduces from 70 miles per hour (110 km/h) to 50 miles per hour (80 km/h), with the first of many Gatso speed enforcement cameras before the road bears to the right and under the bridge. Joining traffic from the A309 joins just before the underpass.