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High Street Kensington is a London Underground station on Kensington High Street, in Kensington. The station is on the Circle line between Notting Hill Gate and Gloucester Road stations, and on the District line between Earl's Court and Notting Hill Gate stations. It is located in Travelcard Zone 1. Kensington Arcade forms the entrance to the ...
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 08:31, 20 February 2011: 640 × 480 (98 KB): GeographBot == {{int:filedesc}} == {{Information |description={{en|1=High Street Kensington tube station, platform 1 Platform 1 is used for anti-clockwise Circle Line and westbound District Line line trains towards Gloucester Road and Earl's Court, respectively.}} |d
Route 328 commenced operating on 29 May 1999 between Golders Green station and Chelsea via West Hampstead, Kilburn, Maida Hill, Notting Hill Gate, Kensington High Street and Earl's Court. It was initially operated by First London's Westbourne Park garage with Marshall Capital bodied Dennis Darts. It replaced the withdrawn parts of routes 28 and ...
Kensington Market opened on Kensington High Street in 1967. It was a three story building of contemporary fashion. It closed in 2000. Kensington High Street's future as a shopping street has been threatened by the large Westfield London, which opened a short distance away in Shepherd's Bush in late 2008.
High Street Kensington, a Tube station on the Circle and District Lines This page was last edited on 23 May 2017, at 20:07 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
First London Wright Eclipse Gemini bodied Volvo B7TL at Kensal Rise station in June 2007 Tower Transit Alexander Dennis Enviro400 at Kensington High Street in August 2013. In 1988, Gold Arrow routes 28 and 31 were introduced, [1] operated by CentreWest. [2]
Warwick Road is located in the Earl's Court district of the Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea in London. The road began to be laid out around 1822 and was gradually extended south to Old Brompton Road over a number of decades.
The average residential property price on the street in 2013 was around £5.5 million, making Prince Consort Road the fourth-most expensive street in the UK. [1] London Buses route 360 starts and ends on Prince Consort Road. The nearest London Underground stations are South Kensington, Gloucester Road, Knightsbridge and High Street Kensington.