Vancouver Sun

Righting a wrong Abbey Road

Drab London railway station is an unlikely magnet for befuddled Beatles fans

- RAPHAEL SATTER

LONDON — It’s a mystery tour, but it’s hardly magical.

More than 14 kilometres from the striped crosswalk made famous by the Beatles album Abbey Road, this drab transit station in east London keeps drawing confused fans of the Fab Four into unwanted jaunts through a gritty, industrial area just south of London’s Olympic Stadium.

Abbey Road Station has no relation to the Beatles’ Abbey Road Studios, the birthplace of the eponymous album and a London tourist landmark.

The glass- and- metal station is wedged among a train depot, warehouses, and gloomy public housing projects, a world away from the leafy, suburban street pictured on the album’s cover.

It didn’t take long for American visitor Christie Johnson, 22, to figure out she was in the wrong place.

“It didn’t look right,” the Denver resident said. She and her embarrasse­d host — English student Melody Vettraino — went looking for the iconic crosswalk on a whim.

At the nearby Star Newsagents, 36- year- old Paramjeet Kaur said her convenienc­e store sees an average of a dozen Beatles fans a day.

Outside, 19- year- old Nathan Johnson said he constantly sees visitors stride across the small, uneven intersecti­on outside the station to recreate the pose struck by Paul McCartney, John Lennon, Ringo Starr and George Harrison on the 1969 album cover — even if the newcomers have come to the wrong place.

“All the time,” Johnson said, smiling.

London counts at least 11 Abbey Roads, with potential tourist pitfalls in neighbourh­oods such as Barking or Bexleyheat­h, both of which are on the outer edges of central London. In the British capital as elsewhere the common street name hearkens to the medieval priories that once dotted the area.

But Abbey Road Station, which opened last year, is the only one in London to bear the name. Given the Beatles connection, some have urged the capital’s transit authority to modify its maps.

Transport for London officials said there are no plans to change the station’s name.

Spokesman Allan Ramsey said in a statement that it is unfortunat­e that some visitors get confused but the problem could be remedied if visitors just did their homework.

Johnson, a semi- profession­al soccer player, said she wasn’t too disappoint­ed to have gone to the wrong Abbey Road, explaining that she wasn’t that big of a Beatles fan anyway.

She said she mostly just wanted a picture of herself on the famous crosswalk to show her friends. Now, she’ll have a different story to tell.

“I’ll say we tried,” she said. “It’ll get a good laugh.”

At the London Beatles Store, which sells Fab Four memorabili­a, owner Howard Cohen said the mixup over the location of the studio is not new — because there are so many Abbey Roads in London — but that the mishaps have been exacerbate­d by the new Abbey Road Station in a distant part of the capital.

“We get so many people coming in looking for the studios that we have maps printed up with directions, free, as a service,” he said. “It’s a bit confusing.”

Even worse, he said, are the hapless tourists who arrive at Liverpool Street Station in central London and believe they are, in fact, in Liverpool, the Beatles’ hometown.

“They ask how to get to Penny Lane and Strawberry Fields,” he said, referring to famous Lennon- McCartney songs based on real places in Liverpool.

The answer, sadly, is 340 kilometres to the north.

 ?? APPLE CORPS LTD. ?? The cover for the Beatles’ Abbey Road album has drawn to London Fab Four fans in search of taking their own stroll.
APPLE CORPS LTD. The cover for the Beatles’ Abbey Road album has drawn to London Fab Four fans in search of taking their own stroll.
 ?? AKIRA SUEMORI/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? A man walks on the crossing made famous from the album cover of The Beatles’ Abbey Road in front of Abbey Road Studios, seen at left, in London.
AKIRA SUEMORI/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES A man walks on the crossing made famous from the album cover of The Beatles’ Abbey Road in front of Abbey Road Studios, seen at left, in London.

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