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Map showing layout of current and former railways and stations around Shepherd's Bush. The station opened on 30 July 1900 and was the original western terminus of the Central London Railway (CLR). [7]
Shepherd's Bush station was designed and funded by the Westfield Group as part of a Section 106 redevelopment contribution, and construction was project-managed by Capita Symonds; this project also included the provision of an integrated bus interchange and the reconstruction of the London Underground Central line station.
In 1900 the Central London Railway (CLR) opened its Shepherd's Bush station, now the Central line station, at the other end of Shepherd's Bush Green. For 108 years there were two Tube stations of the same name 0.3 miles (480 m) apart. In 2008 the new London Overground Shepherd's Bush railway station was opened on the West London Line.
The two present-day Shepherd's Bush stations are in close proximity and form an interchange between London Underground and National Rail. With the addition of another station bearing the name Shepherd's Bush, it was decided to rename the Shepherd's Bush station on the Hammersmith & City line (the old 1914 Metropolitan line Shepherd's Bush ...
English: Map of London Underground stations in Shepherd's Bush showing development of Central Line and Hammersmith and City Line. ... Shepherd's Bush tube station;
This is a route-map template for the Stations around Shepherd's Bush, a Transport for London service or facility.. For a key to symbols, see {{railway line legend}}.; For information on using this template, see Template:Routemap.
Four years later, in 1914, the original Shepherd's Bush station (built in 1867) closed, replaced by two new stations which opened on 1 April 1914. The new Shepherd's Bush station was re-sited a short distance north across the Uxbridge Road, with Goldhawk Road about half a kilometre to the south. [12] The two stations remain in the same ...
Ordnance Survey map showing Shepherd's Bush station on the Metropolitan Railway. Original map scale: 25 inches to One Mile/880 feet to One Inch. Date: Revised 1893-94, Published 1896. Source: Ordnance Survey. London LXXIII. Public Domain as published more than 50 years ago. Author: Ordnance Survey