I found something out about the Central Line, between Liverpool St and Bank the tight curves are actually dodging the old foundations of the buildings above. Also there is one curve that avoids the Vaults of the Bank of England! :D
I frequented the London Underground system for many years and I loved it. Now, as my time runs out, all that is finished, just memories. But what memories. I no longer have any reason to travel, or any money to travel. And I wouldn't just hop on a train to nowhere for the feels. It wouldn't work. The journey and the destination are entwined. Each enhances the other. So vids like these are my window into a gone but never forgotten past. Muchas Gracias!
Hey Geoff, if I can add one more thing, if you go to the front of the eastbound platform at Holborn station and peer into the tunnel, you can see a distinctive white light at the far end of it - that's Chancery Lane station!
"It's quicker to walk from Queensway to Baywater" t-shirt, now available from the Londonist shop! www.moretvicar.com/collection/londonist/product/its-quicker-to-walk-t-shirt
+sd2787 Its considerably cheap as t-shirts aren't that cheap anyway. He's not forcing you to buy a t-shirt, there just there if you want to purchase one.
Yes! And although it has the shortest escalator it's equivalent to 16 floors. Why 16 floors? Because every other tube station has 15 floors and Stratfort wants the record.
Small but helpful tip. When entering Stratford station from the Westfield entrance. Don’t follow the first sign to the central line as that takes you on a much longer route. Its quicker to just go down the second escalator slightly further on, you’ll get to the central line platforms about twice as quick :)
The De La Rue (Bank of England) printing works is on Langston Road in Loughton, you would pass it long before you reach Roding Valley. It's visible on the left on a Westbound train just before it arrives in Debden or on the right of an Eastbound train leaving Debden. The printing works is the most distant building from Debden station in that industrial estate before the countryside sets in.
Not far from the epping to ongar steam railway you can find the worlds oldest surviving wooden church, heavily restored but never demolished, build in 1060 CE
I LOVE this video and all comments! I am Canadian living in London and love all this nostalgia! My wife who is British just shrugs, I make her ride all these lines with me and I am wide-eyed with enthusiasm (way past zone 6, but I am paying so who cares!) I think it's so fun!
Gants Hill looks the way it does because engineers from the London Underground had consulted on the initial construction of the Moscow Metro, were impressed with the station layouts the Soviets were using, and recommended something similar for London.
The Central line is an elegant design masterpiece! I love Roding Valley btw, especially how the trains go past you towards Epping on the platform that curves away from you when you are waiting for the train to Hainault.
In times past I traveled on the extention to the Central Line beyond Epping. You had to get off the tube train and walk up the platform and then get on another tube train which eventually took you to Ongar albeit I was actually travelling to North Weald in order to see an air display at the aerodrome there when they used to have such things. I'm glad they have managed to find a use for that bit of line but it's a shame they discontinued the tube arrangement. Sometimes progress seems more about going backwards!
When we lived in London, during 2000, we used the tube as much as we could to visit as many pubs as we could nearly every Sunday. We visited some very interesting places!...The Milenium Pub Crawl....what a year.
You forgot about Leyton! On match days when Leyton Orient play at home, there is a secret gate that they open to deal with crowds, trust me i have been through it
It's strange to me how Roding Valley is the least used Underground station because it is the station I personally have used the most in my entire life. I spent quite a lot of my life living between Buckhurst Hill and Woodford, hence Roding Valley being the station I would get on and off at nearly every day
absolutely love your commentary and your videos. I can't get enough - just watched the Bakerloo line and this video. Would love to see you reveal NYC's subway lines
This brings back memories. The Central Line project in the early to mid nineties was the 1st LU line I worked on as a radio commissioning engineer, eventually working on all the lines. I'm still at it and currently working on Crossrail.
I have travelled hundreds of times between Shepherds Bush and White City and for 40+ years wondered “why does the train appear on the far right having departed Shepherds Bush on the left’. Wow, now I understand. Thank you so much 👏👏👍😀
Only just discovered these fantastic shorts...completely hooked now, won't get any work done! Thanks for a brilliant series, can't wait to spot some of the features you have pointed out!
Karen Pinchbeck Thanks Karen! We do loads of great London vids, subscribe up to see what else Geoff gets up to! (There's a DVD too with extra stuff if you're interested)
Thank you for such a great film, which Leo (aged 4) and I (considerable older) very much enjoy. We had previously seen the clocks with roundels instead of numbers at Bethnal Green, but were so excited to see from your film that there were more such clocks at Gants Hill we made a special trip to check them out!! It was great to see them. But here is some BIG news...there's are two more clocks with roundels instead of numbers at the bottom of the escalators at Wanstead tube! Great news for fans of clocks with roundels instead of number like us!! Love your work Geoff! David and Leo
There are many Moscow Metro stations with that layout, with a concourse (?) down the middle and the platforms off each side. I'm not sure which one resembles Gants Hill most closely, though the Moscow ones are generally more ornate.
On top of this, did you know that at Chancery Lane the Westbound trains are directly underneath the Eastbound trains, yet at St Paul's (the next station) the Eastbound trains are directly underneath the Westbound!! Weird!!
Brilliant film! When starting to visit my aunt in Leytonstone as a German teenager in the early 1970ies, one of my favourite pasttimes was exploring the underground network. It is still fascinating although I miss the era when a train guard was operating the doors on the old Metro Cammel rolling stock.
This video got me a point in my pub quiz tonight...! The question was "From which map did Ongar disappear from... ?" or something along those lines! I even elaborated to state that it was on the Central line past Epping...My teammates (who happen to be my family) were impressed. We live in the Midlands and so the Underground is not generally part of our everyday life...although my husband and I visit London semi regularly to visit his sister. She lives on the Victoria line not far from Angel...
There was a young girl from Darjeeling Who took the 5:30 to Ealing The sign did implore Please don't spit on the floor So she carefully spat on the ceiling.
On the oldest part of the Central Line the tracks have a rising grade approaching the stations to assist braking and a falling grade leaving the stations to assist acceleration. Cool videos!
The Paris Metro has that feature on Ligne 1 (and possibly others). Since Ligne 1 is straight for much of its length from the city centre out to the west, and the trains are driverless so you can sit up front and look straight down the tunnel, this is very noticeable.
Yep. I've been on TGV's and Eurostars, but when the Central Line train takes off from Stratford and winds up in the tunnel, you *know* you're moving... :)
When I used to work in the city one unseasonably hot spring day in 2012 I was stuck between St Paul's and Bank (in tunnel) for 30 mins. My suit was soaked through, and everyone looked like they's just got off a water slide! Hope I never experience that again!
Excellent video. I wish I had travelled on the old section between Epping and Ongar when it was in use. 🤨 Geoff Marshall makes the best videos about the London Tube 👏🏿
We visited family in the UK a few years ago and we got around a fair bit on the tube when we went to London. I found this very interesting. Thank you 👍
When you leave Shepherd's Bush towards White City you can see the sharp right hand turn that the train makes by looking at either the carriage in front or the one behind, it is so sharp a turn that the train seems to strain at this angle. Also, I seem to remember standing on Holborn station's westbound platform & being able to see Chancery Lane's westbound platform by looking down the tunnel. The stations are quite close to each other. Hanger Lane used to have a main circular pedestrian subway under the A40 which had multiple exits leading to different sides of the road, it always fascinated me as a child.
We stayed near Bethnal Green station when in London a couple of weeks ago and noticed the clock with roundels. It even made it into one of the pictures although not as centerpiece.
Love this information. I never realised that so much detail went into the building of stations etc. Fascinating stuff. A well earns subscription from me.
This is my local train!! I live in ongar so i need to take the bus to epping which is very annoying as central line used to go to ongar!! But my workplace is in holland park so it takes time which doesn’t matter. I like this train!!
I don't know why, but that was fascinating. I've never been to London, and probably never will (although I'd love to go), but I found that very interesting, and very well done.
3:37-3:48 Wood Lane is similar to New York's City Hall Station because of the shape and also like City Hall it closed because of 3 reasons: 1-It was too close to Shepherd's Bush, 2-It was too small for longer trains and 3-It was too small and got congested.
Interesting fact also about Roding Valley was that tickets where originally sold via a Gibson Ticket Machine in the 70s and 80s, the same machine used by bus conductors.
Would you be able to do a short video on the lost connection from the main line steam trains at Stratford to Leytonstone (now Central) and Ilford to Newbury Park (now Central). My deceased father used to drive steam locos along both parts on through the lovely Barkingside station.
KasabianFan44 yeah! But the Victoria line is the first fastest, the jubilee and/or central line is the second fastest or the piccadilly line and the bakerloo line is the last fastest train
I'm surprised you didn't mention the old British Museum stop. I went through one day when it was lit, for whatever reason, and felt for a moment that I'd entered a different dimension.
Also, the platforms at Tottenham Court Road, particularly on the Central Line are really dark. I don't know why, but for that reason, I find them a bit spooky - it might be because of my fear of the dark '~'.
I found something out about the Central Line, between Liverpool St and Bank the tight curves are actually dodging the old foundations of the buildings above. Also there is one curve that avoids the Vaults of the Bank of England! :D
an old girlfriend of mine told me that
Jonathan Vogel She sounds like she would have been a keeper!
This sounds like it should be an idea for a bank heist movie where someone breaks into the bank via the underground tunnels lol
Drill through the wall of the tunnel into the vault gta v style
BurgerMan233 kk
I worked on the Railway for 25 years and love the history and idiosyncrasies of it... all the secrets and stuff ive seen.. its an amazing place..
Yh
Hi
I frequented the London Underground system for many years and I loved it. Now, as my time runs out, all that is finished, just memories. But what memories. I no longer have any reason to travel, or any money to travel. And I wouldn't just hop on a train to nowhere for the feels. It wouldn't work. The journey and the destination are entwined. Each enhances the other. So vids like these are my window into a gone but never forgotten past. Muchas Gracias!
Hey Geoff, if I can add one more thing, if you go to the front of the eastbound platform at Holborn station and peer into the tunnel, you can see a distinctive white light at the far end of it - that's Chancery Lane station!
1:40:27-Speedence safety comes first though so sadly we miss out
What the heck why are you saying, "FUCKING BITCH!" why are you saying that kid
Mental problems
"It's quicker to walk from Queensway to Baywater" t-shirt, now available from the Londonist shop! www.moretvicar.com/collection/londonist/product/its-quicker-to-walk-t-shirt
Nice 😃😃
Londonist my mum was born in Leytonstone😀
+sd2787 Its considerably cheap as t-shirts aren't that cheap anyway. He's not forcing you to buy a t-shirt, there just there if you want to purchase one.
+Alphie S.Q. My Grandad was born in Leytonstone!
Would one tap out and back in?
Tube station: *holds any record *
Stratford: I’m gonna stop you right there
Stratford is just built different
@@terminx7841 Frrrr
Gants hill: 1. ur overground 2. im the eastermost completely underground station
Yes! And although it has the shortest escalator it's equivalent to 16 floors.
Why 16 floors?
Because every other tube station has 15 floors and Stratfort wants the record.
stratford gets wooden treads on escalators!
1:50 to the right: "Rear Window"
1:55 "North by Northwest"
2:00 to the right: "Vertigo"
2:02 "Psycho"
Lift trick:
Lifts always chime once when they’re going up and twice when going down. Useful info!
Jasmine Johnston yes ,this is true but not all lifts arent like this.
I live in a Manchester highrise and that's actually true. 👍👍
*_UNTIL THE NEW STRATFORD STATION WAS BUILT_*
Small but helpful tip. When entering Stratford station from the Westfield entrance. Don’t follow the first sign to the central line as that takes you on a much longer route. Its quicker to just go down the second escalator slightly further on, you’ll get to the central line platforms about twice as quick :)
Ikr
2:48 You're attracting quite a bit of attention, Geoff...
Moritz L why is the woman looking at Geoff?
Not very British..
*UNTIL THE NEW STRATFORD STATION WAS BUILT*
XD
Wow
The De La Rue (Bank of England) printing works is on Langston Road in Loughton, you would pass it long before you reach Roding Valley. It's visible on the left on a Westbound train just before it arrives in Debden or on the right of an Eastbound train leaving Debden. The printing works is the most distant building from Debden station in that industrial estate before the countryside sets in.
My aunt used to work there. She lived out at Horley near Gatwick airport. Some commute!!
2:47 that woman in the background is like "wtf is that guy doing?"
Not far from the epping to ongar steam railway you can find the worlds oldest surviving wooden church, heavily restored but never demolished, build in 1060 CE
Sod9ckd
I LOVE this video and all comments! I am Canadian living in London and love all this nostalgia! My wife who is British just shrugs, I make her ride all these lines with me and I am wide-eyed with enthusiasm (way past zone 6, but I am paying so who cares!) I think it's so fun!
Gants Hill looks the way it does because engineers from the London Underground had consulted on the initial construction of the Moscow Metro, were impressed with the station layouts the Soviets were using, and recommended something similar for London.
The "Whistle" sign and the train whistling at 1:44 made me chuckle. Something about the scene and the sound itself is somehow charming!
2:29 Simon from Inbetweeners
how would you know?
Robert Obrien i
how the HELL did you notice that?! hahaha
Raph CJ What?
Oh friends
The Central line is an elegant design masterpiece! I love Roding Valley btw, especially how the trains go past you towards Epping on the platform that curves away from you when you are waiting for the train to Hainault.
In times past I traveled on the extention to the Central Line beyond Epping. You had to get off the tube train and walk up the platform and then get on another tube train which eventually took you to Ongar albeit I was actually travelling to North Weald in order to see an air display at the aerodrome there when they used to have such things. I'm glad they have managed to find a use for that bit of line but it's a shame they discontinued the tube arrangement. Sometimes progress seems more about going backwards!
Lj
When we lived in London, during 2000, we used the tube as much as we could to visit as many pubs as we could nearly every Sunday. We visited some very interesting places!...The Milenium Pub Crawl....what a year.
You forgot about Leyton! On match days when Leyton Orient play at home, there is a secret gate that they open to deal with crowds, trust me i have been through it
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leyton_tube_station if you don't believe me
Crowds? At Leyton Orient?
i trust you. i saw that during Olympics.
You forgot um startford
I've been through that gate
2:20 Sorry mate, I think you're the only one who does those quizes
It's strange to me how Roding Valley is the least used Underground station because it is the station I personally have used the most in my entire life. I spent quite a lot of my life living between Buckhurst Hill and Woodford, hence Roding Valley being the station I would get on and off at nearly every day
Bro is the sole person keeping roding valley alive
2:15 there also appears to be a roundel on the hour hand. Brilliant!
That makes two of us who spotted that.
absolutely love your commentary and your videos. I can't get enough - just watched the Bakerloo line and this video. Would love to see you reveal NYC's subway lines
This brings back memories. The Central Line project in the early to mid nineties was the 1st LU line I worked on as a radio commissioning engineer, eventually working on all the lines. I'm still at it and currently working on Crossrail.
it must've been awkward to shout hello
Yup.
I've been watching this guy for years and I have enjoyed every video
Great Video, anyone who loves London and its history should watch this video. Nice one.
I have travelled hundreds of times between Shepherds Bush and White City and for 40+ years wondered “why does the train appear on the far right having departed Shepherds Bush on the left’. Wow, now I understand. Thank you so much 👏👏👍😀
2:47 that lady be like, “what are you doing?”
Only just discovered these fantastic shorts...completely hooked now, won't get any work done! Thanks for a brilliant series, can't wait to spot some of the features you have pointed out!
Karen Pinchbeck Thanks Karen! We do loads of great London vids, subscribe up to see what else Geoff gets up to! (There's a DVD too with extra stuff if you're interested)
+Londonist Londonist Where can I grab a copy of this fantastic-sounding DVD?
4:18 - Just saw the new video where the wooden escalator is now no longer wooden or an escalator! :O
Drawyah i have one on mu channel of the inclinator
Drawyah hi drawyah
Those escalators, with the uplighters, were beautiful. After the Kings Cross tragedy, they had to replace them with the safer but ugly metal ones.
Thought for the Day kings X incident?
MAS_ pilot. Fire, 1987, 31 people died.
Thank you for such a great film, which Leo (aged 4) and I (considerable older) very much enjoy.
We had previously seen the clocks with roundels instead of numbers at Bethnal Green, but were so excited to see from your film that there were more such clocks at Gants Hill we made a special trip to check them out!! It was great to see them.
But here is some BIG news...there's are two more clocks with roundels instead of numbers at the bottom of the escalators at Wanstead tube!
Great news for fans of clocks with roundels instead of number like us!!
Love your work Geoff!
David and Leo
Who's here after the have randomly been recommended this...
Yes and I’m even from England lol
S K yes but weirdly I fucking love it
I'm here because I watched secrets of the district line. My fiancé thinks I'm an absolute geek
You forgot to mention that Gants Hill station was based on designs made for the Moscow Metro!
Because this is a UA-cam video they fit in around 5 mins of footage, there's a dvd explaining more secrets.
+Samad Mckenna-Ahmedi He only needed to say one line.
Well if you think about it every scene is like 16-30 seconds
Samad Mckenna-Ahmedi f
There are many Moscow Metro stations with that layout, with a concourse (?) down the middle and the platforms off each side. I'm not sure which one resembles Gants Hill most closely, though the Moscow ones are generally more ornate.
Wanstead & Gants Hill remind me of the Prague Metro, & Redbridge reminds me of U-Bahn stations in Germany.
Wasn't Gants Hill copied from some Russian station ?
I am addicted to these videos
On top of this, did you know that at Chancery Lane the Westbound trains are directly underneath the Eastbound trains, yet at St Paul's (the next station) the Eastbound trains are directly underneath the Westbound!! Weird!!
Oh wow, a total vertical switch. That's brilliant! Thanks for sharing that.
I like to imagine the lady at 2:48 thinking "I'm about to see some shit!"
“And this escalator-”
Stratford: “N O”
Brilliant film! When starting to visit my aunt in Leytonstone as a German teenager in the early 1970ies, one of my favourite pasttimes was exploring the underground network. It is still fascinating although I miss the era when a train guard was operating the doors on the old Metro Cammel rolling stock.
This video got me a point in my pub quiz tonight...!
The question was "From which map did Ongar
disappear from... ?" or something along those lines! I even elaborated to state that it was on the Central line past Epping...My teammates (who happen to be my family) were impressed.
We live in the Midlands and so the Underground is not generally part of our everyday life...although my husband and I visit London semi regularly to visit his sister. She lives on the Victoria line not far from Angel...
Nice Video Geoff. The underground facinates me with all it's history etc. Keep them rolling!
That transition at 1:39 - niiiiice!
There was a young girl from Darjeeling
Who took the 5:30 to Ealing
The sign did implore
Please don't spit on the floor
So she carefully spat on the ceiling.
On the oldest part of the Central Line the tracks have a rising grade approaching the stations to assist braking and a falling grade leaving the stations to assist acceleration.
Cool videos!
Laura Halliday which one? White City?
The Paris Metro has that feature on Ligne 1 (and possibly others). Since Ligne 1 is straight for much of its length from the city centre out to the west, and the trains are driverless so you can sit up front and look straight down the tunnel, this is very noticeable.
@@Great_WesternTVFan ,Loughton towards the city
Excellent film. I much enjoy the odd historical tidbits. I am a foreigner so all extremely new and useful.
1:41 "Wooford" is a great place for lovers to visit and a very well-kept Secret of the Underground.
This or Woo-ford Green splits the village in 2.
Is _Wooford_ somewhere near Barking?...
Can't get enough of this channel!
1:37 That was cleannnn
I stumbled across these videos by accident, now i'm addicted.
2:47 that woman looked at him like he was committing a war crime
This train terminates at... The Hague
@@cephalopod7300 great username
Keep it up my tube guy
This is absolutely fantastic you have such a knack for presenting. Very informative and interesting, thank you
Awesome 😎🤗 Thanks for pointing me to this.
One thing that makes me sad was like 4 years ago at pre covid times I would watch this guys videos so much
4:04 Now that escalator is gone and there's an inclinator in its place.
I have watching this series so many times I can pretty much narrate with him
I love the sound the central line trains make when leaving a station
Yep. I've been on TGV's and Eurostars, but when the Central Line train takes off from Stratford and winds up in the tunnel, you *know* you're moving... :)
I like it too
I'am Indonesian, but I love this channel
It's the longest line and one of the busiest at peak times. Not the tube you want to get stuck in a tunnel on a hot day.
When I used to work in the city one unseasonably hot spring day in 2012 I was stuck between St Paul's and Bank (in tunnel) for 30 mins. My suit was soaked through, and everyone looked like they's just got off a water slide! Hope I never experience that again!
Excellent video. I wish I had travelled on the old section between Epping and Ongar when it was in use. 🤨
Geoff Marshall makes the best videos about the London Tube 👏🏿
I work at Newbury park sometimes on rail replacement so I use the central line quite alot in 2-3 days
We visited family in the UK a few years ago and we got around a fair bit on the tube when we went to London. I found this very interesting. Thank you 👍
When you leave Shepherd's Bush towards White City you can see the sharp right hand turn that the train makes by looking at either the carriage in front or the one behind, it is so sharp a turn that the train seems to strain at this angle. Also, I seem to remember standing on Holborn station's westbound platform & being able to see Chancery Lane's westbound platform by looking down the tunnel. The stations are quite close to each other. Hanger Lane used to have a main circular pedestrian subway under the A40 which had multiple exits leading to different sides of the road, it always fascinated me as a child.
1:50 Also from Leytonstone (or Leyton - never really known the difference): David Beckham (born there) & Jonathan Woss (grew up there).
You have forgotten a secret about Epping station that there is a 1930's train parked there 😁
And it's recently had a new lick of paint.
I've lived in Epping for 14 years and I didn't even know about that.
We stayed near Bethnal Green station when in London a couple of weeks ago and noticed the clock with roundels. It even made it into one of the pictures although not as centerpiece.
I can recall sneaking up a spiral staircase to dodge ticket barriers at Marble Arch.
Love this information. I never realised that so much detail went into the building of stations etc. Fascinating stuff. A well earns subscription from me.
Stratford being cheeky....
This is my local train!! I live in ongar so i need to take the bus to epping which is very annoying as central line used to go to ongar!! But my workplace is in holland park so it takes time which doesn’t matter. I like this train!!
The central line is the best!
I don't know why, but that was fascinating. I've never been to London, and probably never will (although I'd love to go), but I found that very interesting, and very well done.
Love your videos if you could do some more local ones would be great :) ps are u on tv if not you should be u got the gift for presenting.
3:37-3:48 Wood Lane is similar to New York's City Hall Station because of the shape and also like City Hall it closed because of 3 reasons: 1-It was too close to Shepherd's Bush, 2-It was too small for longer trains and 3-It was too small and got congested.
Interesting fact also about Roding Valley was that tickets where originally sold via a Gibson Ticket Machine in the 70s and 80s, the same machine used by bus conductors.
Great fact, David. thanks!
These videos are great! Thank you for making them!
I watched it all in one day! :)
The Central Line is the BEST!
I guess...
I don't even remember commenting this...
Must have been pissed!
I guess...
The worst you mean
Glen Mears it’s his opinion
Thomas Joosten its worst, at summer time from holborn to marble arch at pick time, will you survive ?
I'm having a good time watching your videos. Thanks!
Did you also know Gants Hill station was also worked on by the same people who built the Moscow Metro?
Would you be able to do a short video on the lost connection from the main line steam trains at Stratford to Leytonstone (now Central) and Ilford to Newbury Park (now Central). My deceased father used to drive steam locos along both parts on through the lovely Barkingside station.
Very interesting stuff, thanks for these videos! Do you have any unusual information on West Ruislip or Uxbridge?
I love your videos man, makes me miss London. Really looking forward to the next one! :)
The Central Line is the (second) BEST!
KasabianFan44 yeah! But the Victoria line is the first fastest, the jubilee and/or central line is the second fastest or the piccadilly line and the bakerloo line is the last fastest train
dawn doherty no. The 1995 train is the 5th best
dawn doherty the bakerloo line is the worst line. And it's the 10th best
Lubdhak Das W no central is the fastest
Really great documentary better than what’s on telly
Interesting stuff, Although I live in New Zealand and have never been anywhere overseas other than Australia..
I love the Central Line!
"The Central Line is the BEST!"
Thx for you support.
Worst*
Not in the summer. It’s one of the deepest underground and therefore one of the hottest. Recently they found that it was the loudest too!
It's the best because it has the fastest trains on the Underground
I like the Jubilee line
Wait is that the actor for Frank Pick on that one Jay Foreman vid about the Tube Map?
00:52 - 01:04 After so many years I finally got the joke...
So excited for next episode!
The central line is The best!!!!!
My favourite line...nothing better than travelling through Tottenham CT Road, Oxford Street, Bond Street and Marble Arch in the heart of the west end.
The Central Line is the BEST
The Central Line has become as hot and crowded as the pit of hell
I get first pick of the seats being first on the line at Epping
The central line is the BEST
I'm surprised you didn't mention the old British Museum stop. I went through one day when it was lit, for whatever reason, and felt for a moment that I'd entered a different dimension.
I've only ever been to Bethnal Green once and I noticed the clock
Also, the platforms at Tottenham Court Road, particularly on the Central Line are really dark. I don't know why, but for that reason, I find them a bit spooky - it might be because of my fear of the dark '~'.
***** Awesome!
Don'tLookOrItTakesYou O.O There's one at Gants Hill as well.
+KasabianFan44 and there's one at Redbridge too :)
Iam MTS Oh is there? Didn't know that :-)