UKAS accredited pendulum testing for railway stations, bus stations, tram stops, Underground concourses and transport interchanges. Platforms, stair cores, ticket halls, external paving. Operator and infrastructure-owner evidence.
A main-line railway station concourse sees the full weather cycle — water tracked from platforms, wet umbrellas, melted snow, autumn leaf mould — compounded by footfall in the tens or hundreds of thousands per day. Station slip claims are frequent and high-profile, with Network Rail, TfL and Train Operating Companies all publishing slip-incident statistics.
Stations are also architectural — glass-and-stone redevelopments, polished stone concourses, Victorian terrazzo, modern vinyl overlays. A heterogeneous floor plate demands a heterogeneous pendulum survey.
Polished stone, granite, terrazzo, porcelain. Wet-weather performance is the critical test — concourse floors routinely test at PTV 45+ in the dry and PTV 22–30 in the wet. The dry-to-wet drop is the important number.
Typically a different material from the main concourse — often polished stone or vinyl. Retail-style claims exposure in the adjacent shops and cafes.
Tarmac, bituminous surfacing, concrete paving slabs, granite edging. The platform edge — the yellow warning line and the tactile strip — is a specific pendulum target given its safety-critical nature. Rail-industry guidance (Network Rail NR/L3/CIV) specifies platform slip-resistance requirements.
Stair nosings are the specific focal point. Modern nosings typically incorporate grit or textured strip; Victorian stone stairs often rely on the material itself and can polish dangerously below PTV 25 on wet treads.
The landing at the top and bottom of escalators is a specific slip hotspot — the pedestrian is stepping off a moving surface onto a stationary one, often with tracked water.
Platforms are partially exposed even when covered. External pedestrian routes to and from station entrances, including set-downs and kerb transitions.
Tarmac, concrete, block paving and coloured thermoplastic marking. Boarding zones concentrate pedestrian traffic in a small area.
Edge-strip, platform surface and street-level transitions. Particularly relevant to Manchester Metrolink, West Midlands Metro, Nottingham Express Transit, Sheffield Supertram, Blackpool tramway and Croydon Tramlink.
| Area | Target PTV (wet) | Typical issue |
|---|---|---|
| Main concourse (stone) | 36+ | Dry-to-wet drop |
| Ticket hall | 36+ | Tracked water at entry |
| Platform surface | 36+ | Edge strip, surface wear |
| Platform yellow line / tactile | 36+ | Surface polishing |
| Staircase nosing | 40+ | Wear, polishing |
| Staircase tread | 36+ | Material-dependent |
| Escalator landing zone | 36+ | Step-off slip |
| Bus station concourse | 36+ | Weather-exposed |
| External station forecourt | 36+ | Seasonal algae, leaves |
Network Rail NR/L3/CIV. Rail industry standards reference slip-resistance testing for platforms, staircases and other passenger-contact surfaces. Capital-works projects at stations are an increasing source of pendulum-testing demand as NR contractors incorporate acceptance testing into handover documentation.
Our UKAS accredited pendulum testing for this sector is delivered across every UK region:
South East England · South West England · East of England · West Midlands · East Midlands · Yorkshire & the Humber · North West England · North East England · Scotland · Wales · Northern Ireland
View all 48 UK city locations or request a fixed-fee quote for your site.
UKAS ISO 17025 accredited pendulum testing across the UK. Report within 5 working days.