24/05/2026
A-station-a-day-for-May
Day 24: COLLIERS WOOD STATION
This one is especially for Matt & Lizzie - Big thanks for yesterday’s BBQ! We headed over to Colliers Wood last night so it feels right to highlight this wonderful Holden Station on Morden Extension of the Northern Line.
Matt bought Lizzie my Northern Line Holden Stations print for her birthday last year, so it was lovely to see it proudly hanging in their hallway 😊 (It was actually Lizzie who gently nagged me to add Colliers Wood into my collection in the first place 😉)
The Morden extention opened on 13 September 1926 and was Charles Holden’s first major project for the Underground. He was selected by Frank Pick, general manager of the Underground Electric Railways Company of London (UERL), to design the stations after he was dissatisfied with designs produced by the UERL’s own architect, Stanley Heaps. Built with a shop to each side, the modernist design, like most of the stations on this stretch, takes the form of a double-height three-sided box clad in white Portland stone with a three-part glazed screen on the front façade divided by columns. Notice that the top of each column on these stations is infact a three-dimensional version of the Underground roundel.
Many of these early Holden stations feature fabulous circular chandeliers but I think the stylish wall light fittings at the top of the escalators are unique to Colliers Wood. Has anyone seen them feature elsewhere?
The pub across the road from Colliers Wood Station (see my final 2 images) is named “The Holden” in honour of the station’s architect 🍻 Check out their bespoke Holden wallpaper 😜