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Entrance from the mainline station. In December 2009, Circle line services began serving the station. Originally operating as a loop-line using tracks constructed by the MR and the DR and serving only the station in Praed Street, the Circle line's route was altered to include the Hammersmith branch to increase train frequency on the branch and improve the regularity of Circle line trains.
Map of Zone 1 Underground stations, pre 2021. London is split into six approximately concentric zones. Zone 1 covers the West End, the Holborn district, Kensington, Paddington and the City of London, as well as Old Street, Angel, Pimlico, Tower Gateway, Aldgate East, Euston, Vauxhall, Elephant & Castle, Borough, London Bridge, Earl's Court, Marylebone, Edgware Road, Lambeth North and Waterloo.
King's Cross St Pancras: 10 January 1863: Opened as King's Cross, renamed King's Cross & St. Pancras in 1925 and King's Cross St. Pancras in 1933. Moved to current position in 1941. [10] Connects with Northern, Piccadilly and Victoria lines St Pancras and King's Cross main-line stations and international rail services.
Paddington, Bond Street, Tottenham Court Road, Farringdon, Liverpool Street: An all station suburban service that serves Terminals 2 & 3, then terminates at Terminal 4. Separate service to Terminal 5: Luton: Thameslink: St Pancras/Farringdon/City Thameslink/Blackfriars/London Bridge: Thameslink route service East Midlands Railway: St Pancras ...
St Pancras railway station (/ ˈ p æ ŋ k r ə s /), officially known since 2007 as London St Pancras International, is a major central London railway terminus on Euston Road in the London Borough of Camden. It is the terminus for Eurostar services from Belgium, France and the Netherlands to London.
In 2023, King's Cross St Pancras was the most used station on the system, with 72.12 million passengers entering and exiting the station. [ 3 ] There is a siding north of the Victoria line platforms to enable trains from Brixton to terminate, turn around and head back south.
Trains depart Paddington every 15 minutes from 05:10 (06:10 on Sunday) until 23:25, [42] and there is a similar quarter-hourly service in the return direction. At Paddington they use dedicated platforms 6 and 7, although on occasions other platforms are used.
However, Gordon later finds out that the station in London is St Pancras. [111] There is a fictional underground Paddington station on the North London System in the novel The Horn of Mortal Danger (1980). [112] Paddington station was the subject of William Powell Frith's 1862 painting The Railway Station.