Trackside Transformation is a comprehensive new volume documenting the architectural evolution of British Mainline Railway Stations over the period 1923 to 1947.
In 1923 the British government's Railways Act came into effect which effectively grouped the myriad of competing mainline railway operators into four large regional firms. The following 25 years saw a brief but sweeping transformation in railway architecture, from ornate Neo-Classical designs to the bold new forms of Streamline Modernism. The 'Big Four' as they were known – the Great Western Railway, London Midland and Scottish Railway, London and North Eastern Railway, and Southern Railway – built a vast estate of new stations and supporting buildings, until post-war nationalisation brought their activities – and their existences – to an end in 1947.
For the first time, Trackside Transformation brings together all the station architecture designed and built by the Big Four during this period. Compiled into four distinct aesthetic approaches, transport writer Daniel Wright catalogues each of the surviving stations alongside contemporary images of the most significant examples from architectural photographer Philip Butler.