*** Welcome to piglix ***

Four Lane Ends Metro Station

Four Lane Ends
Tyne and Wear Metro
BSicon lINT.svg
Four Lane Ends Metro station
Four Lane Ends metro station, opened in 1980 as part of the first section of the Metro system.
Location
Place Longbenton
Local authority North Tyneside
Fare zone information
Network One zone 2
Metro zone B
Original (1979) zone 17
Station code FLE
Operations
Platforms 2
Escalators 2 both 'up' escalators
History
Opened 1980-08-11
List of stations
Four Lane Ends Interchange
Four Lane Ends Interchange.jpg
Location Four Lane Ends, Benton
North Tyneside
Operated by Nexus
Bus stands 7
Bus operators Stagecoach North East, Arriva North East, Veolia Transport
Connections Four Lane Ends Metro station (adjacent)
History
Opened August 1980

Four Lane Ends Metro station is a station on the Tyne and Wear Metro network. It forms part of a major transport interchange located on the boundary of North Tyneside and Newcastle upon Tyne in England.

The station is located at the junction of Benton Lane (A188), Benton Park Road (A191) and Front Street (A191). The crossroads has historically been important for traders, cattle drivers, and those transporting local salts and lime towards the shipyards and factories in Newcastle. In 2008-9 the interchange was used by over 900,000 passengers, of which over 500,000 can be attributed to Metro journeys.

Nearby employment sites such as the Benton Park View government complex at Longbenton, which houses DWP, HMRC offices and Quorum Business Park mean that the station is one of the most used on the Metro system. Regular bus services depart the interchange for destinations towards Killingworth, Newcastle city centre, Northumberland and Wallsend.

The station was erected specifically to service the Metro light rail system, opening in August 1980, although built at the location of the long-closed Long Benton station (not to be confused with Longbenton), opened in 1864 and closing (when replaced by Benton) at the start of 1871, the last remains of which disappeared when Four Lane Ends was built.

Whilst the Tyne and Wear Passenger Transport Authority utilised existing stations where possible, such as at Whitley Bay and Tynemouth, new stations such as Four Lane Ends had a definite corporate look of rectangular blocks, light enamelled wall panels, and black roofing. The interchange was redeveloped in 2004 to include a multi-storey car park and improved facilities. Despite the redevelopment of the interchange the station concourse remains unchanged.


...
Wikipedia

...