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Ghost Stations in London - Former Underground Stations

2016-12-25 22 Dailymotion

Thanks for watching....<br />1. Aldgate East tube station<br />2. Aldwych tube station<br />3. Aylesbury railway station<br />4. Blake Hall tube station<br />5. Brill railway station<br />6. British Museum tube station<br />7. Brompton Road tube station<br />8. Bushey railway station<br />9. Carpenders Park railway station<br />10. West Ealing railway station<br />11. City Road tube station<br />12. Down Street tube station<br />13. Drayton Park railway station<br />14. Granborough Road railway station<br />15. Hammersmith (Grove Road) railway station<br />16. Hillingdon tube station<br />17. Hounslow Town tube station<br />18. King William Street tube station<br />19. Lord's tube station<br />20. Mark Lane tube station<br />21. Marlborough Road tube station<br />22. North Weald railway station<br />23. Ongar railway station<br />24. Quainton Road railway station<br />25. St. Mary's (Whitechapel Road) tube station<br />26. Shoreditch tube station<br />27. South Kentish Town tube station<br />28. Swiss Cottage tube station (1868-1940)<br />29. Uxbridge Road tube station<br />30. Verney Junction railway station<br />31. Waddesdon railway station<br />32. Waddesdon Road railway station<br />33. Westcott railway station<br />34. Winslow Road railway station<br />35. Wood Lane (Metropolitan line) tube station<br />36. Wood Siding railway station<br />37. Wotton railway station<br />38. York Road tube station<br /><br />Source:<br />http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_former_and_unopened_London_Underground_stations<br /><br />Music : Orange, Topher Mohr and Alex Elena, YouTube Audio Library<br /><br />The London Underground is a public rapid transit system in the United Kingdom that serves a large part of Greater London and the home counties of Essex, Hertfordshire and Buckinghamshire. It has many former stations, while others were planned but not opened. Some stations were closed because of low passenger usage rendering them uneconomical; some became redundant after lines were re-routed or replacements were constructed; and others are no longer served by the Underground but remain open to National Rail mainline services. Many stations were planned as parts of new lines or extensions to existing ones but were later abandoned.<br /><br />Some closed station buildings are still standing, converted for other uses or abandoned, while others have been demolished and their sites redeveloped. A number of stations, while still open, have closed platforms or sections, such as the Jubilee line platforms at Charing Cross. The interiors and platforms of a few closed stations are among parts of the London Underground available for filming purposes, such as those at Aldwych.<br /><br />Closed when the current station was opened a short distance to the east to enable the Aldgate junction to be rebuilt Terminus of Piccadilly line branch line from Holborn; closed due to low passenger numbers and cost of replacing lifts The service was cut back to Amersham when electric locomotive-hauled trains were replaced with A60 Stock trains. Closed when Central line platforms were opened at Holborn Closed due to low passenger numbers and creation of a new entrance to Knightsbridge station Former peak hours only service withdrawn to save money following cancellation of Greater London Council's Fares Fair policy Former peak hours only service withdrawn to save money following cancellation of Greater London Council's Fares Fair policy The Windsor service was cut back to Ealing Broadway due to low passenger numbers. It is now West Ealing station. Two platforms are still functional but were removed from public use when the Jubilee line extension to Stratford was opened in 1999. Former Northern line Highbury Branch between Moorgate and Finsbury Park converted to main line operation.

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