The glass, steel, and aluminum diagrid roof of the new Western C…
The glass, steel, and aluminum diagrid roof of the new Western Concourse at King’s Cross station spans out from a central woven funnel.
Hufton + Crow
Underneath the 74-meter open span, passengers move through a pla…
Underneath the 74-meter open span, passengers move through a plaza filled with shops, access the busy King’s Cross/St. Pancras Underground station, and purchase tickets for the trains that depart from the platforms beyond.
Hufton + Crow
The curving roof plane of the new Western Concourse extends in a…
The curving roof plane of the new Western Concourse extends in an uninterrupted 74-meter radius from this central stalk.
Hufton + Crow
View of the Western Concourse main floor from the mezzanine leve…
View of the Western Concourse main floor from the mezzanine level.
Hufton + Crow
In the Western Concourse, a sinuous mezzanine level hosts restau…
In the Western Concourse, a sinuous mezzanine level hosts restaurants and shops and follows the same curving geometry as the station’s roof structure.
Hufton + Crow
Lined with shops and restaurants, the mezzanine also has a pedes…
Lined with shops and restaurants, the mezzanine also has a pedestrian footbridge at one end that connects passengers to the train platforms in the station’s historic main train shed beyond.
Hufton + Crow
The underside of the mezzanine level in the new Western Concours…
The underside of the mezzanine level in the new Western Concourse at King's Cross station is lined with 5 million white ceramic tiles, coated to repel dirt.
Courtesy John McAslan + Partners
Courtesy John McAslan + Partners
Courtesy John McAslan + Partners
Hufton + Crow
To the east of the Western Concourse, and accessed by a new seri…
To the east of the Western Concourse, and accessed by a new series of gates at the southern end, are the train platforms in the station’s main train shed. John McAslan + Partners is overseeing restoration and refurbishment in this space as well: The reglazing of the barrel-vaulted roof is expected to be completed later this summer.
Hufton + Crow
Pedestrian footbridge offering mid-track access to the passenger…
Pedestrian footbridge offering mid-track access to the passenger trains in the Main Train Shed.
Hufton + Crow
Entrance to the rail offices in the redeveloped Eastern Range, w…
Entrance to the rail offices in the redeveloped Eastern Range, which was completed in 2009.
Hufton + Crow
New circulation was added to access different parts of the stati…
New circulation was added to access different parts of the station over the course of the multi-stage redevelopment.
Hufton + Crow
The building’s curving form was designed to complement (and, i…
The building’s curving form was designed to complement (and, in fact, fit into) the curve of the adjacent Great Northern Hotel, which was designed by the same architect and completed two years after the historic station.
Courtesy John McAslan + Partners
King's Cross station redevelopment master plan
It is one of John McAslan + Partners (JMP)’s biggest British projects. But the £547 million ($886 million), multiphase overhaul of London’s King’s Cross rail terminal came with problems on a matching scale. Four years ago, when construction began on the project’s centerpiece—an outsized concourse for departing passengers—time was already tight. The 160-year-old King’s Cross station is a Grade I–listed historic building, and any plans required lengthy consultation. What’s more, no work could begin until the roof slab was in place for a new ticket hall at the London Underground station below, and rail authorities allowed no trains to be canceled during construction.
Yet the deadline was fixed: The showcase concourse had to be ready in time for this summer’s Olympic Games. Passenger numbers at King’s Cross—already one of the city’s busiest stations—are expected to rise steeply as people take advantage of the new Javelin high-speed train to the games site, which will leave from the neighboring St. Pancras terminal. (St. Pancras shares the same Underground stop with King’s Cross.)
These days, London-based JMP’s chairman John McAslan, Intl. Assoc. AIA, can look back with relief: After 15 years of planning, the Western Concourse opened in March, on time and to huge acclaim. The 47 million people who pass through King’s Cross each year—a number that is projected to increase by another 10 million by 2020—can now move easily through a 7,500-square-meter (80,730-square-foot) covered concourse that more than triples the size of the station’s previous forecourt and ticket hall. In the end, “the constraints became opportunities,” McAslan says. “But it was like an examination question where the answers had to be exactly tailored to all the conditions.”
Central to JMP’s design for the Western Concourse is the shell-like diagrid roof of glass, steel, and aluminum that rises 20 meters (66 feet) above the ground at its highest point. Engineered by Arup, the vast canopy splays out from a great steel funnel located a few feet from the historic station’s western façade. (Yet another constraint was that no additional load could be placed on the station wall itself.) Intersecting branches of steel spread downward, spanning out in a 74-meter (243-foot) radius from that central point. A ring of 16 supporting columns at the outer edge takes the load. With no supporting columns in between, the Western Concourse is now the largest single-span structure in Europe.
Inspiration for the roof’s airy glass-and-steel design came partly from the 19th century. “I have always liked the great Victorian glasshouses as at Kew Gardens,” says McAslan, who’s also a keen admirer of Grand Central Terminal in New York. But other influences, he says, included the soaring airports designed by Eero Saarinen—Dulles International in Washington, D.C., and John F. Kennedy International in New York. As at an airport, the departure and arrival areas of King’s Cross are now separate, and McAslan hopes that the elegance of the concourse will capture something of the glamour of air travel. (“Why should air passengers always be treated so well and rail passengers so shabbily?,” he wonders.)
Happily, this reflects the client’s own thinking. Network Rail wanted a building that was more than merely functional. “This wasn’t just about providing more space,” says Ian Fry, the company’s programme director for the Western Concourse. “We wanted something that would give passengers an uplifting experience at the start of their journey.”
Project Credits
Project King’s Cross Station Western Concourse Client Network Rail Architect and Master Planner John McAslan + Partners, London—John McAslan, Hiro Aso, Simon Goode, Pauline Nee (key project team); Jasmine Wadia, Mark Bell, Katherine Watts, David Jackson, Aidan Potter, Adam Brown, Philip Veall, Louise Hansen, Sascha Stscherbina, Michael Mason, Dean Kirkwood Engineer for Roof and Platform Refurbishment and Footbridge to Station Tata Steel Europe Engineer for Western Range and New Concourse Arup Architect for King’s Cross Square Stanton Williams Contractors Laing O’Rourke and Costain Group joint venture (Eastern Range Building); Carillion (Platform 0); Vinci Construction UK (platform refurbishment, footbridge, service yard, Western Range, and new concourse); Kier Rail (roof refurbishment); Osborne Co. (Suburban Train Shed roof repainting) Cost Consultant Network Rail’s in-house commercial team Size 7,500 square meters (80,730 square feet) Cost £547 million ($886 million, total cost for the multiphase King’s Cross station redevelopment, of which the Western Concourse was a part)
Subcontractors
Balustrade Design Rationale; Marsh Bros. Engineering Services (repairs) Blockwork Walls Swift Brickwork Contractors Booking Hall Fit-Out A. Edmonds & Co. Conservation Works Cliveden Conservation Ceilings MPG Group (corridor, plaster); Design Rationale (stainless steel cladding) Doors Houston Cox (fire doors); Prima doors (steel doors) Flooring Gormley Group (Western Concourse granite flooring) Glazing LeeWarren (glass-wall cladding to public toilets); SkyLight Solutions (roof light) Heritage Plasterworks Simplicity Mouldings Masonry Gormley Group (Granite and York stone); Pyramid (brickwork, copings, sills, and cornices) Mechanical/Electrical NG Bailey Metal Hatches Bilco Mezzanine Building Shell Swift Horsman Painting K&M McLoughlin Decorating Toilet and Shower Installation Houston Cox Roofing Mundy Group (Western Range building roofing); Seele (Western Concourse roof structure and cladding) Screeding Advanced Screeding Shopfront Screens Houston Cox Soft Flooring AC Flooring Southern-end Infill Glazing WrightStyle Handrails Design Rationale Station Overlays LeeWarren Storage Essex Woodcraft; Piper Joinery (storage, cabinets, tables) Structural Works McGee Group Walls Design Rationale (stainless steel cladding); MPG Group (plaster) Wayfinding Houston Cox (signage)