
Mornington Crescent Underground Station - Hampstead Road, London, UK
N 51° 32.055 W 000° 08.340
30U E 698422 N 5713118
Mornington Crescent tube station is on the Morden branch of the Northern line and is located between Euston and Camden Town stations.
Waymark Code: WMEPBR
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 06/22/2012
Views: 3
The Transport for London website (visit
link) tells us about the station that is a listed building:
"London Underground station. 1907. By Leslie Green.
Maroon glazed faience. 2 storeys. 2 bays to Hampstead Road and 1 bay left
return. Giant arches to each bay of pilasters supporting architraved heads with
keystones. Upper parts of arches treated as glazed tympana and flanked by lugged
architraved sashes. Entrance to right and lifts in left hand bay. C20 shop in
return bay. White band at 1st floor level. Modillion cornice and blocking course
above white faience frieze bearing words "Mornington Crescent Station" on both
facades.
Interior with some original features including panelled exterior lift doors, Art
Nouveau decorative grilles above and indicators, lift interiors. Tiles restored
and ticket-office window replaced."
Tips for using getting around in London:
Oyster Card
An Oyster Card allows you to travel on the tube network, buses and the DLR as
well as some mainline train routes in London. More information can be found at
the Visitor Tickets page at the
Transport for London (TfL) website. The big advantages are that (a) you do not
have to queue for tickets and (b) using an Oyster Card is cheaper than buying
tickets. For example (June 2012) the cost of a single bus journey, if you pay
cash, is £2.30 but, using an Oyster Card it is £1.35 saving almost a pound a
journey.
Walking
The City of London and Central London are a lot smaller than people think and it
is often quicker to walk from one place to another than the time it takes to use
public transport. The iconic tube map distorts the distances between stations
with the journey from Covent Garden to Leicester Square being the most famous
example.
Time Out magazine carried a a story about this famous route:
"Leicester Square to Covent Garden on the Piccadilly
Line. It’s the shortest tube journey in town – less than 300 yards long. It’s
the briefest tube journey in town – just 45 seconds from platform to platform.
And it’s also the most expensive tube journey in town – four quid to travel a
quarter of a kilometre. But does this deter thousands of tourists every year
from making the trip? Of course not.
London Underground are worried. Tourists are irresistibly drawn to Covent
Garden, teeming as it is with fashionable boutiques, silver-faced mime artists
and juggling unicyclists. But Covent Garden station is 100 years old, and
struggling to cope. There’s no space to install escalators, so every year 16
million people have to fight their way in and out via the lifts and stairs. A
major infrastructure upgrade is long overdue."
This link to
london-tubemap.com shows a
map of the underground with stations shown in their correct relationship to each
other and has some interesting overlays.