Whether you live in London or just outside, commuting can be an absolute faff, and we recently covered how it makes a fair few of us across the capital pretty unhappy. But no one knows the frustration of delays quite as well as people who frequently rely on one particular station in central London.
City Thameslink, a busy rail hub between Farringdon and Blackfriars, has just been named the UK’s most delayed train station. According to Metro, new research has looked at the UK’s top 100 stations by passenger volume (ie the nation’s busiest stations) and calculated the number of delayed services for each.
Though it’s not the biggest or most hectic train station in the capital, City Thameslink is connected to popular commuter towns such as Bedford, Stevenage and St Albans. It sees almost 18,000 passengers pass through it every day.
But research has found that of the 69,120 services that have departed from the hub over the last six months, only 24 percent were on time. That means that over three quarters of the trains passing through have been delayed. Three quarters.
The capital’s performance overall was actually pretty dismal. Of the 20 most delayed stations in the country, where all entries experience disruption on at least half of services, nine are apparently located in London.
Fresh after being named one of the country’s most depressing places to live, East Croydon claimed third place in the study, thanks to delays on 67 percent of trains. Earlsfield in south London also had delays on 67 percent of services, while services from Surrey Quays were delayed 64 percent of the time.
Denmark Hill, Canada Water, Shoreditch High Street, Bromley South and Vauxhall were the other five London stations which made the list, all experiencing delays on at least 54 percent of services.
More on transport in London
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