Inputs
Formula Used
- Platform Area = Platforms × Platform Length × Platform Width
- Concourse Area = Concourse Length × Concourse Width (or direct entry)
- Entrance Area = Entrances × Entrance Area Each
- Vertical Circulation = Escalators×A + Elevators×A + Stairs×A
- Retail Area = Concourse Area × Retail % (or direct entry)
- Circulation Allowance = (Platform + Concourse) × Circulation Factor
- Service Allowance = Base Net × Service %
- Ops Allowance = Base Net × Ops %
- Net Area = Sum of all components
- Gross Area = Net ÷ Efficiency (or Net × Gross Factor)
- Gross + = Gross × (1+Shell %) × (1+Contingency %)
How to Use This Calculator
- Select your input units and station type.
- Enter platform dimensions and number of platforms.
- Provide concourse size using dimensions or direct area.
- Add entrances and vertical circulation counts as allowances.
- Set circulation, service, and operations percentages for your standards.
- Pick a grossing method and include shell and contingency if needed.
- Press Calculate, then export CSV or PDF for sharing.
Example Data Table
| Example input | Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Station type | Underground | Planning stage selection |
| Platforms | 2 | Island or side platforms, as applicable |
| Platform length × width | 140 m × 12 m | Dimensions vary by rolling stock |
| Concourse | 60 m × 20 m | Or enter direct concourse area |
| Entrances × each | 4 × 85 m² | Includes entry lobby and approaches |
| Escalators / Elevators / Stairs | 8 / 4 / 4 | Allowance areas are editable |
| Circulation factor | 0.18 | Applied to platform + concourse |
| Service / Ops allowances | 18% / 8% | Back-of-house + staff spaces |
| Grossing | Efficiency (default) | Uses type-based default if blank |
| Shell + contingency | 6% + 8% | Early design allowances |
1) What this calculator estimates
This tool produces a planning-level station area breakdown from a few early inputs: platform geometry, concourse size, entrance allowances, and vertical circulation quantities. It then layers circulation, back-of-house services, and operations spaces to form a net total. Finally, a grossing method converts net area into a practical overall station footprint for budgeting and concept comparisons.
2) Key drivers you should validate
Platform length and width typically follow rolling stock and passenger demand, while concourse area is strongly influenced by fare collection layout, interchange needs, and peak crowding. Entrance counts and their allowance areas depend on site access points, emergency egress strategy, and surrounding development. Escalator, elevator, and stair quantities should be aligned with accessibility requirements and vertical travel distances.
3) Allowances and how to interpret them
The circulation factor is applied to platform plus concourse to represent corridors, queuing, and movement buffers that are often under-modeled in simple area takeoffs. Service and operations percentages represent rooms that appear later in design: electrical and communications rooms, plant, staff amenities, security, stores, and control functions. Treat these as adjustable standards, not fixed rules.
4) Net-to-gross conversion
Two approaches are provided. Efficiency uses gross = net / efficiency, which is helpful when your organization has benchmark efficiencies by station type (underground often lower due to shafts and structure). Factor uses gross = net × factor, which is convenient for rapid option studies. Shell and contingency adders further protect early estimates.
5) Using results in design and cost planning
Use the component table to test scenarios: reduce concourse size, add entrances, or compare escalator-heavy layouts versus stair-focused solutions. Export CSV for estimating sheets and PDF for approvals. As concept design matures, replace allowances with measured areas from layouts, and lock your efficiency or factor to project benchmarks and local code requirements.
FAQs
1) Is this a detailed architectural takeoff?
No. It is a concept estimator that uses editable allowances. Confirm areas with layouts, code checks, and operational reviews before issuing final drawings or cost baselines.
2) Why does underground typically have lower efficiency?
Underground stations often need more shafts, thicker structure, plant spaces, and complex circulation, which increases gross area relative to net usable areas.
3) Should I enter concourse by dimensions or direct area?
Use dimensions when you only know a rough footprint. Use direct area when you already have a layout-derived concourse area or a verified benchmark.
4) What does the circulation factor represent?
It approximates corridors, queuing, and movement buffers beyond the main platforms and concourse. Adjust it to match your design standards and passenger flow assumptions.
5) How do retail inputs affect results?
Retail can be set as a percentage of concourse or a direct area. It increases net area and will also increase gross area after efficiency, shell, and contingency are applied.
6) Can I use the gross factor method for quick option studies?
Yes. A gross factor is fast for comparisons. Once benchmarks are known, switching to an efficiency target can better reflect station-type constraints.
7) Do the exports include my last calculation?
Yes. After you click Calculate, the tool stores the latest run in your session and uses it for CSV and PDF downloads until you run a new calculation.