Free Wifi For London Overground Passengers

As we reported last month, 80 Underground stations are soon to provide a free wifi facility to passengers. London Overground is quickly following suit with an announcement today that users will, by the end of this year, also be able to enjoy a similar facility. 56 stations on the network will allow passengers 60 minutes of free access each day.

The first phase of installation will see 12 wifi-enabled stations by December, with the remaining 44 rolled out during 2013. The initial batch of stations enjoying the service will include: Willesden Junction, West Hampstead, New Cross Gate, Forest Hill, West Croydon, Norwood Junction, Surrey Quays, Dalston, Wapping, Hackney Central, Kensington Olympia and Shepherd’s Bush.

Notably, free wifi at Underground stations will only be available until the end of the Paralympics (after which it will be provided on a pay-as-you-go basis, unless you are a Virgin Media subscriber). By contrast, wifi access at Overground stations is intended to remain free indefinitely. Kudos you, London Overground!

Passengers wishing to access the free service will be required to register with The Cloud, the provider of the facility. It is not yet clear whether, once registered, users will be able simply to access the same account each day or whether fresh registration may be necessary. We presume that it will be the former, so as to save users’ time.

This is, undoubtedly, a welcome move on the part of London Overground and one which will see the daily commuting experience of many passengers enhanced.

Photo by Paul Wood in the Londonist Flickr pool.

  • http://londonist.com/ Dean Nicholas

    Anyone who’s attempted to use The Cloud’s Square Mile wifi “zone” will perhaps be less than thrilled by this announcement.

    Also, this is probably going to be less useful than it may appear, as the majority of Overground stations are (as the name suggests) overground, so passengers with smartphones already have 3G connectivity.

    • Kay

      Good point, but keep in mind that this is London and we have a barrage on non-Londoners using our transport system ever day, most of whom will have to pay for using 3G on their machines.

      Also, not everyone will be using a phone, some might be on non-3G supported devices, such as laptops, old ipads, etc. 

      I think we should welcome this and urge the tube to follow suit. In fact I think we should push to have the entire network including trains connected, and not just stations…

    • http://twitter.com/FeignedMischief Simone Laberinto

      It also means saving your mobile data which is good news for most if not the rest of us!

  • Clive Handy

    Agreed, my touch doesn’t even have a phone on it, but it is a very useful device on Wi-fi. Not everyone has 3G you know…..

  • Bouncee84

    Great Idea until whilst happily surfing the net on your fancy new ipad a bunch of dodgy thieves get onto the train and help themselves!

    • Fiona Silk

      If they can just “help themselves” you need to (wo/)man the F up and learn to defend yourself.

  • Maps

    While I welcome the fact that I’ll be able to use wifi data while underground, I am certainly not looking forward to the barrage of VoIP calls that I am currently spared.

  • vanessa Griffiths

    great more radiation ! Lets see how fast cancer rates spike in the next couple of years and then wonder why.