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Tottenham Court Road looking north, with the Euston Tower in the distance. Tottenham Court Road is a significant shopping street, best known for its high concentration of consumer electronics shops, [5] which range from shops specialising in cables and computer components to those dealing in package computers [clarification needed] and audio ...
Crossrail links Tottenham Court Road to Canary Wharf, Abbey Wood, Stratford, and Shenfield in the east with Paddington, Heathrow and Reading in the west. [7] The central section of the Elizabeth line opened on 24 May 2022 between Paddington and Abbey Wood. [20] Direct service to Reading, Heathrow, Stratford and Shenfield commenced on 6 November ...
Google Maps' location-tracking feature, known as Timeline, is undergoing a major update. Previously, Google announced plans to shift this data to local storage. Now, the company is sending out ...
In 2014, during a 15-week closure after the end of We Will Rock You, both the interior and the exterior were extensively refurbished, including restoring architectural features on the Tottenham Court Road façade, such as the gryphons, which are believed to have been removed in 1932, cleaning and replacing stonework and windows at the rear and ...
The Ancient Parishes of – west to east – Paddington and St Marylebone (in the modern City of Westminster), and St Pancras (in the modern London Borough of Camden).The core area of Fitzrovia (Tottenham Court), is the south-western part of St Pancras; the remainder of Fitzrovia is in south-eastern St Marylebone.
Chenies Street from the junction with Gower Street looking west. Chenies Street is a street in Bloomsbury, London, that runs between Tottenham Court Road and Gower Street.It is the location of a number of notable buildings such as Minerva House, the Drill Hall (now RADA Studios), and a memorial to The Rangers, 12th County of London Regiment.
The premises adjoins Warren Street, Euston Road and Tottenham Court Road; Warren Street is named after the 18th-century naval officer Sir Peter Warren. [8] The station is on the Charing Cross branch of the Northern line between Euston and Goodge Street stations, and on the Victoria line between Oxford Circus and Euston stations. [9]
Because of Tottenham's long history as a borough, the Tottenham name is used by some to this day to describe the whole of the area formerly covered by the old borough, incorporating the N17 postcode area and part of N15. [24] However, there are differing views as to what constitutes the Tottenham neighbourhood in the present day.