Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Seven Sisters Market. Today Seven Sisters is a multi-cultural area strongly influenced by its location on key road and underground rail routes. Immediately above the tube station is an early-Edwardian department store building, formerly occupied by Wards Furnishing Stores, which traded until 1972. Part of the building, known locally as Wards ...
The two London Overground platforms at Seven Sisters Station. The distance between Seven Sisters and Finsbury Park stations on the Victoria line is 3.15 km (1.96 miles) making it the longest distance between adjacent stations in deep level tunnels on the London Underground network. [11]
The Seven Sisters Ward has the largest proportion of Jewish residents among Haringey wards, at 18.1%. ... and by Seven Sisters station, on the London Overground, ...
Seven Sisters Road is a road in north London, England which runs within the boroughs of Islington, Hackney and Haringey.It is an extension of Camden Road, running from Holloway Road (the A1 road) at the Nags Head crossroads then on to another crossroads with Blackstock Road and Stroud Green Road.
Seven Sisters, England may refer to: Seven Sisters, Sussex : a group of chalk cliffs Seven Sisters, London : an area of north London in the London Borough of Haringey, served by Seven Sisters station
At around the same time, Angell and a London builder Thomas Oldis were responsible for development that began to spread eastward along the north side of Seven Sisters Road. From 1868 to 1870 large detached houses with gardens running down to the New River were built at the east end of Seven Sisters Road.
South Tottenham is a railway station on the Suffragette line of the London Overground.It is located on the eastern side of the A10 High Road in Tottenham, North London, 5 miles 69 chains (9.4 km) from St Pancras (measured via Kentish Town and Mortimer Street Junction) [4] and situated between Harringay Green Lanes and Blackhorse Road.
London Transport AEC Routemaster on Wood Green High Road in April 1981. Today's route 29 traces its history back to a daily route between Victoria and Wood Green via Whitehall, Charing Cross Road, Camden Town, Seven Sisters Road and Green Lanes, Harringay, which began operation on 20 November 1911.