Or at least, the surviving entrance building, as the rest of Curzon Street station is no longer with us.
The entrance building, however, is Grade I Listed, so will hopefully be with us for many moons to come. It was built in 1838, and contains a plaque commemorating the first Birmingham-London trains that ran from here. It's actually the oldest surviving original piece of railway architecture in the world, which is pretty impressive in itself.
I used to work very near here, and always had a fondness for this old relic - looking a little lost and incongruous, I have to admit, with its Italianate pillars and grand Victorian stone, amongst the wasteland/ modern redevelopments of the Eastside neck of the woods.
There are plans to incorporate the building into the HS2 development - presumably the building would have to be kept - what with the Grade I listing, and all that. It'll be interesting to see it in its new manifestation on the new rail track is built. read more