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File:LeicesterSquareTubeStation.jpg | |
Location | Leicester Square |
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Local authority | Westminster |
Managed by | London Underground |
Number of platforms | 4 |
Fare zone | 1 |
London Underground annual entry and exit | |
2005 | 29.544 million[1] |
2007 | 38.687 million[2] |
1906 | Opened |
Lists of stations | *DLR |
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Leicester Square is a station on the London Underground, located on Charing Cross Road, a short distance to the east of Leicester Square itself.
The station is on the Northern Line between Charing Cross and Tottenham Court Road, and the Piccadilly Line between Piccadilly Circus and Covent Garden. It is in Travelcard Zone 1.
On early Tube plans, the station was listed as Cranbourn Street, but the present name was used when the station was first opened by the Great Northern, Piccadilly and Brompton Railway on 15 December 1906.
Like other stations on the original sections of the Piccadilly and Northern Lines, the station was originally constructed with lifts providing access to the platforms. The increase in passenger numbers in the 1920s as the Northern line was extended north (to Edgware) and south (to Morden) and the expected further increase from the 1930s extensions of the Piccadilly Line lead to the reconstruction of the station below ground in the early 1930s. New station entrances were constructed to a new sub-surface ticket hall. As with the similar sub-surface ticket hall previously built at Piccadilly Circus this was excavated partially under the roadway. From there banks of escalators were provided down to both sets of platforms. The redundant lifts were removed but the lift shaft remains in use as a ventilation shaft hidden behind a small door on the first landing of the Cranbourn street entrance stairs.
The escalators down to the Piccadilly Line were the longest on the entire Underground network, being 54 m (177 ft) in length, until the rebuilding and reopening of Angel in 1992, which overtook Leicester Square with its 60 m (197 ft) escalators.
Offices above the red terracotta station building on the east side of Charing Cross Road are occupied by the Northern Line management staff. The building, known as Transad House, was in its early years, occupied by the publishers of the Wisden Cricketers' Almanack and an image of cricket stumps appears above a door way.
The station is featured briefly during the introductory video sequence of the sixth Harry Potter film.
Transport links[]
London bus route 14, 19, 24, 29, 38, 176, night route N5, N20, N29, N38, N41 and N279.
See also[]
- Leslie Green - architect of original station building
- Charles Holden - architect of new ticket hall and entrances
References[]
External links[]
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- London Transport Museum Photographic Archive
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Terminus | {{{{{system}}} lines|{{{line}}}}} | Terminus | ||
Piccadilly line | towards Cockfosters
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Northern line Charing Cross branch |
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Coordinates: 51°30′41″N 0°07′41″W / Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[".
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