Crystal Palace Subway

Crystal Palace Subway


London, England

Crystal Palace Subway. AmunyAnkhesenra (Atlas Obscura User)

Hidden under one of the main roads around Crystal Palace Park is a cavernous, vaulted structure that strongly resembles a crypt from a Byzantine church. However, this was no last resting place for the dead, but a thoroughfare for the living who came to visit the Crystal Palace.

Crystal Palace Subway. AmunyAnkhesenra (Atlas Obscura User)

After the Great Exhibition in Hyde Park, the Crystal Palace was moved to Penge Common in South London. To bring visitors to the new exhibition site, two railway stations were opened.

Unrestored parts of the subway. AmunyAnkhesenra (Atlas Obscura User)

Both were (confusingly) called Crystal Palace, distinguished by their location: Low Level and High Level. The latter was built into a ridge below the road on the opposite side from the Palace, and to allow visitors an easy route, a subway was built from the railway terminus.

Crystal Palace Subway. AmunyAnkhesenra (Atlas Obscura User)

The similarity of the subway to a crypt was no coincidence, as it was designed and built by cathedral craftsmen from Italy. Consisting of octagonal pillars, stone ribs, and a warm palette of reds and creams, the subway would have fitted with some of the exotic displays inside the Crystal Palace.

Crystal Palace Subway. AmunyAnkhesenra (Atlas Obscura User)

The fire that destroyed the Crystal Palace in 1936 rendered the High Level station practically obsolete, and it was eventually demolished. The subway survived, though, and took on many roles in the following years.

Entrance to Crystal Palace Subway. AmunyAnkhesenra (Atlas Obscura User)

During the Second World War, it was converted into an air-raid shelter with bunk beds and terrible chemical toilets. After the war, children could often be found playing in the subway and the surrounding ruins; the ’90s brought ravers, and a brief period of fame in the video for the Chemical Brothers’ single “Setting Sun.” For some years, the subway was then closed due to safety concerns. The work of the Friends of Crystal Palace Subway led to some restoration of the structure, allowing visitors in on special weekends to see what for most of the year remains another of London’s secrets that are just out of sight. The Friends of Crystal Palace Subway open the space on three weekends of the year, for the Crystal Palace Festival, Heritage Open Day, and Open House Weekend.

Address: 12 Burntwood View, London, England, United Kingdom

I want to visit it!

Report Page