Harry Beck

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Harry Beck (Henry C. Beck, 19031974) was a graphic designer, best known for creating the present London Underground Tube map in 1931.

At that time, Beck was an engineering draughtsman at the London Underground Signals Office, and constructed the diagram in his spare time. In 1947, when he was not fully employed (having left London Transport) he begin teaching typographics and colour design at the London School of Printing and Kindred Trades.

Prior to the Beck diagram, the various underground lines were laid out geographically, often superimposed on a road map. This had the feature that centrally located stations were very close together, and the out of town stations were spaced apart. Beck had the idea that passengers on the system weren't too bothered about the geographical accuracy, but were more interested in how to get from one station to another, and where to change. Thus he drew his famous diagram, looking more like an electrical schematic than a true map where all the stations are more or less equally spaced.

The diagram does have a few anomolies. For example, checking the diagram to see how to get from Bank to Mansion House, the casual traveller, would take the Central line to Liverpool Street and change onto the Circle line to Mansion House (about 6 stops and one change). A more savy London Underground user would take the escalator connection to Monument and then the Circle or District line to Mansion House (2 stops and an escalator ride). The really clued up Londoner would walk the 50 metres between the stations (though you would never guess from the diagram). In fact the escalator between Bank and Monument is longer than the distance between Bank and Mansion House.

Beck's idea was copied by most, if not, every subway (and bus) company in the world.

Beck continued to update the Tube map on a freelance basis, but the future Victoria Line was added in 1960 by the Publicity Officer, Harold Hutchison. Many other changes were also introduced to the map without Beck's approval.

Beck struggled furiously to regain control of the map, but responsibility for the map was eventually given to a third designer, Paul Garbutt. He changed the style of the map to look more like Beck's maps of the 1930s, and also introduced the 'vacuum flask' shape for the Circle Line. Although Beck preferred this version to Hutchison's, he wasn't completely satisfied. He started to make a new map, based both on his earlier works and Garbutt's ideas. When this version too was rejected, despite its simplicity and ease of reading, Beck realized London Transport would never publish any map by his hand. Nevertheless he continued to make sketches and drawings for the map until his death.

After long failing to acknowledge Beck's importance as the original designer of the Tube map, London Regional Transport finally created the Beck gallery at the London Transport Museum in the early 1990s, where his works can be seen. A commemorative plaque was put up at Finchley Central tube station, Beck's home station, as well. Recently, Transport for London has also started to credit Beck for the original idea on the modern Tube maps.

External links

References

  • Ken Garland. Mr Beck's Underground Map. Harrow Weald, Middx: Capital Transport, 1994. ISBN 1854141686.