- Metropolitan line
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Metropolitan Colour on map Magenta Year opened 1863 Line type Sub-Surface Rolling stock A Stock and S Stock 8 carriages per trainset
Stations served 34 Length 66.7 km (41.4 mi) Depots Neasden[1] Journeys made 53.697 million (2007)[2] Rail lines of Transport for LondonLondon Underground lines Bakerloo Central Circle District Hammersmith & City Jubilee Metropolitan Northern Piccadilly Victoria Waterloo & City Other lines Docklands Light Railway Tramlink Overground The Metropolitan line is part of the London Underground. It is coloured in Transport for London's (TfL) Corporate Magenta[3] on the Tube map and in other branding. It was the first underground railway in the world, opening as the Metropolitan Railway on 10 January 1863. (Parts of that initial railway are no longer served by the Metropolitan line, but by the Hammersmith & City, District and Circle lines.) The main line runs from Aldgate in the City of London to Amersham in Buckinghamshire, with branch lines to Uxbridge, Watford and Chesham. On the southern section the line is below ground for much of the way; north of Baker Street, at Finchley Road the line runs in the open. Of the 34 stations served, nine are below ground. It is the ninth busiest line on the network.[4]
The four-track section between Wembley Park and Moor Park allows the running of express or "fast" services to the outer suburbs which can overtake slower stopping trains. The Metropolitan is the only Underground line with this feature, and the only one to which the general rule "all trains call at all stations" does not apply.
Baker Street is the central London terminus for many trains, while others continue into the City to terminate at Aldgate.
The line has the highest speed limits on the London Underground network. Before the late 1990s/early 2000s, the fast line north of Harrow-on-the-Hill was 70 mph (113 km/h). The Metropolitan stock has now been limited to 50 mph (80 km/h), still one of the fastest. Line speeds have fallen accordingly, with the majority of the line north of Finchley Road limited to 50 mph (80 km/h) (although where National Rail services run on the line it is 60 mph (97 km/h)).
The Metropolitan line and the Central line are the only two Underground routes with stations outside the boundaries of Greater London and the M25 orbital motorway.
Contents
History
Main article: Metropolitan RailwayThe origins of the Metropolitan line lie with the incorporation, in 1853, of the North Metropolitan Railway, the original name of the Metropolitan Railway, which had been empowered to build a line from the Great Western Railway at Paddington to Farringdon, with a connection to the Great Northern Railway at King's Cross.[5] Work on the railway had begun in February 1860 using the "cut-and-cover" method of construction. This caused great traffic disruption in north London; during the work the Fleet Sewer burst into the diggings, flooding the partly built tunnel.[6][7] The first section was opened from near Paddington to Farringdon Street (now Farringdon station) in January 1863.[8] Later in 1863, it was suggested that all the main-line termini of London should be linked by underground railway. Parliament recommended that the best way of doing this was to form an "inner circuit", part of which would be the existing Metropolitan Railway; another section would be built by a new company (the Metropolitan District Railway), whilst the Metropolitan would build the connecting lines.[9]
Between its opening and the 1930s the railway was expanded until its total mileage exceeded 90, most of it progressively electrified from 1905. In 1933 the Metropolitan Railway was nationalised by the London Passenger Transport Act 1933, becoming the Metropolitan line of London Transport. The line was successively rationalised during the ensuing period. The section northwest of Aylesbury was closed in 1936, though services did return to Quainton Road between 1943 and 1948. Also in 1936 the Metropolitan line was extended from Whitechapel to Barking along the tracks of the District line. In 1939 the Stanmore branch was transferred to the Bakerloo line. (It was subsequently transferred to the Jubilee line when that line opened in 1979.)
Steam-hauled passenger trains ran north of Rickmansworth until 1961 and maintenance trains until 1972. A major modernisation of that part of the line took place by 1960. In September 1961 the service north of Amersham was withdrawn, along with the steam passenger service. The line north of Harrow-on-the-Hill was quadrupled to Northwood Hills by 1961 and to Croxleyhall Junction (north of Moor Park) by 1962. Formerly, local and semi-fast services from Aylesbury to Harrow had shared the double track with main line expresses of the former Great Central route.
Another major change took place in 1988, when the Hammersmith & City and East London Lines, were rebranded as separate lines rather than parts of the Metropolitan line. The Metropolitan line is now confined to its original route from Aldgate to Baker Street, running through the tunnels opened by the Metropolitan Railway back in 1868, and northwards, through the area that came to be known as "Metro-land". The East London Line shared stock with the Metropolitan line until its closure in 2007 for conversion into a London Overground line. While there was never through running between the two lines, there is a physical connection (via St Mary's curve), although this is now redundant, because the East London Line now uses Overground rolling stock.
In 1998, the infrastructure of the Metropolitan line was partly privatised in a controversial public–private partnership. It is now part of the "Sub-Surface Railways" group, managed along with the Circle, Hammersmith & City and District lines by London Underground Limited, formerly the Metronet consortium.[10]
The Metropolitan line, being the first underground railway in the world, has had a major influence on underground railways worldwide. The Paris Métro took its name, in full Chemin de fer Métropolitain, from the Metropolitan line. The modern word metro is derived from the word Metropolitan.
Rolling stock
The rolling stock still largely in use on the Metropolitan line is the sub-surface-gauge A Stock built by Cravens in Sheffield, which were shared with the East London Line until 2007. It ran in service with unpainted aluminium bodywork for many years, but when refurbished in the 1990s it received the now standard white and blue Underground livery, with red ends. A Stock Metropolitan line services are formed of two four-car units coupled together to make eight-car trains, although the former Chesham shuttle service was served by a four-car train, as was the East London Line when it was an Underground route.
The A Stock trains were built between 1960 and 1962. This is now the oldest passenger rail fleet on the UK mainland, and LUL says it requires "an intense maintenance regime" to keep up an acceptable level of reliability.[11] They replaced a wide variety of older rolling stock, including trains with hinged doors and compartments (T Stock electric multiple units for Watford services and locomotive-hauled carriages for Aylesbury services), as well as London Underground P stock (built in 1937) and F Stock (built in 1920) used on Uxbridge services.
The A Stock trains are now being progressively replaced by new S Stock. The first S Stock trains entered service in summer 2010[11] and it is intended that all 58 new eight-car sets for the Metropolitan will be in service by mid 2012. In combination with new signalling, the new fleet will increase overall capacity on the line by 27%.[12]
Map
Stations
Metropolitan Main line LegendJubilee Line To Circle Line Baker Street Non-stop section Regent's Canal Lord's (1868-1939) St John's Wood Marlborough Road (1868-1939) Swiss Cottage (1868-1940) London to Aylesbury Line (to Marylebone station) Finchley Road Non-stop section West Hampstead (1879-1940) Kilburn (1879-1940) Willesden Green Dollis Hill (1909-1940) Neasden Wembley Park Stanmore branch (now Jubilee Line) Kingsbury (1932-1939) Queensbury (1934-1939) Canons Park (1932-1939) Stanmore (1932-1939) Preston Road (1908-1932) Preston Road (1932-) Northwick Park Harrow-on-the-Hill Uxbridge branch West Harrow Piccadilly Line from South Harrow Rayners Lane Eastcote Ruislip Manor Ruislip Ickenham Hillingdon (1923-1992) Hillingdon (1992-) Uxbridge depot Uxbridge (1904-1938) Uxbridge (1938-) North Harrow Pinner Northwood Hills Northwood Moor Park Watford Curve Croxley Proposed Croxley Rail Link Ascot Road Watford West Watford DC Line Watford High Street West Coast Main Line Watford Junction Watford Rickmansworth Chorleywood Chalfont & Latimer Chesham Amersham Closed to Brill & Verney Junction Great Missenden (1892-1961) Wendover (1892-1961) Stoke Mandeville (1892-1961) Aylesbury (1892-1893) Aylesbury (1894-1961) Waddesdon (1897-1936) Quainton Road (1896-1936, 1943-1948) Quainton Road (1891-1896) Former Great Central Railway route Granborough Road (1891-1936) Winslow Road (1891-1936) Verney Junction (1891-1936) Waddesdon Road (1899-1935) Westcott (1899-1935) Wotton (1899-1935) Wood Siding (1899-1935) Brill (1899-1935) Dates relate to Metropolitan Railway operations In order from east to west
Shared Circle and Hammersmith & City lines Station Image Opened Additional information Aldgate 18 November 1876 Terminusmap 1 Liverpool Street 12 July 1875 Opened as Bishopsgate, renamed 1 November 1909map 2 Moorgate 1865 Trains from the north/west can terminate at Moorgate, but none regularly do in the current timetablemap 3 Barbican 1865 Opened as Aldersgate Street, renamed to Aldersgate in 1910, renamed Aldersgate and Barbican in 1923, current name is from 1968map 4 Farringdon 10 January 1863 map 5 King's Cross St. Pancras 1863 map 6 Euston Square 1863 Originally Gower Streetmap 7 Great Portland Street 10 January 1863 Originally Portland Roadmap 8 Core Section The Metropolitan line diverges from the Circle/Hammersmith & City lines just east of Baker Street station, where they use separate platforms, at a roughly 45 degree angle to the Circle/Hammersmith & City platforms Baker Street 10 January 1863 Most trains begin their northbound journey heremap 9 Finchley Road* 30 June 1879 map 10 Wembley Park** 14 October 1893 Fully opened 12 May 1894map 11 Preston Road 21 May 1908 The line passed through here en route to Harrow, 2 August 1880map 12 Northwick Park 28 June 1923 Opened as Northwick Park and Kenton, the line passed through here en route to Harrow, 2 August 1880map 13 Harrow-on-the-Hill 2 August 1880 At Harrow, the line splits into two branches – the main line to Watford and Amersham, and the Uxbridge branchmap 14 * – Between Finchley Road and Wembley Park the Metropolitan line's tracks run outside the tracks of the Jubilee line. Between Finchley Road and Wembley Park, Metropolitan line trains do not stop at West Hampstead, Kilburn, Willesden Green, Dollis Hill, and Neasden stations. Willesden Green and Neasden stations have platforms on the Metropolitan line tracks, but Metropolitan line trains stop there only during emergencies, or when there are major operating issues with either the Metropolitan or Jubilee lines. ** – At Wembley Park, the Metropolitan lines split from two tracks to four, with the faster lines on the outside. Fast services (typically to Amersham and Chesham) and semi-fast services (typically to Watford) do not stop at Preston Road or Northwick Park. During peak periods, they also skip Wembley Park, running non-stop from Finchley Road to Harrow-on-the-Hill. Uxbridge branch
Continuing from Harrow on the Hill Station Image Opened Additional information West Harrow 17 November 1913 map 15 Rayners Lane 26 May 1906 From Rayners Lane to Uxbridge the line shares tracks with the Piccadilly line Eastcote 26 May 1906 Opened as Eastcote Haltmap 17 Ruislip Manor 5 August 1912 Opened as Ruislip Manor Haltmap 18 Ruislip 4 July 1904 map 19 Ickenham 25 September 1905 Opened as Ickenham Haltmap 20 Hillingdon 10 December 1923 map 21 Uxbridge 4 July 1904 Terminusmap 22 Northwood branch
Continuing from Harrow on the Hill Station Image Opened Additional information North Harrow 22 March 1915 map 23 Pinner 25 May 1885 map 24 Northwood Hills 13 November 1933 map 25 Northwood 1 September 1887 The last station within Greater Londonmap 26 Moor Park 9 May 1910 Opened as Sandy Lodge; renamed Moor Park & Sandy Lodge, 18 October 1923; current name from 25 September 1950map 27 After Harrow-on-the-Hill the lines are re-arranged into two neighbouring pairs: the slow (the northerly pair) and the fast. The fast lines are also shared with the National Rail line to Aylesbury (operated by Chiltern Railways) which south of Harrow on the Hill run parallel. The stations between Harrow-on-the-Hill and Moor Park (exclusive) have platforms only on the slow lines, and are stopped at only by slow and semi-fast services, which usually run to Watford. At Moor Park the line splits, with the fast line forming the main line towards Amersham and the slow line heading towards Watford. Watford branch
Continuing from Moor Park Station Image Opened Additional information Croxley 2 November 1925 Opened as Croxley Green, renamed 23 May 1949map 28 Watford 4 November 1925 map 29 A triangular connection ("the North Curve") also exists, allowing trains to run between Watford and Rickmansworth, and there are a few early-morning/late-evening services that do this. Towards Amersham or Chesham
Continuing from Moor Park Station Image Opened Additional information Rickmansworth 1 September 1887 map 30 Chorleywood 8 July 1889 Opened as Chorley Wood; renamed Chorley Wood & Chenies, 1 November 1915; reverted 1934; current name from 1964map 31 Chalfont & Latimer 8 July 1889 Opened as Chalfont Road, renamed 1 November 1915map 32 Stations between Rickmansworth and Amersham are also served by most Chiltern services to Aylesbury. Here trains continue either to Amersham or on a separate branch to Chesham. Until December 2010, out of peak times, Chesham was served by a shuttle service by a 4 car A stock train, which was stabled at Chalfont & Latimer in the peak hours. The service interval to Chesham is roughly every 30 minutes. Continuing from Chalfont & Latimer Station Image Opened Additional information Chesham 8 July 1889 The original northern terminus of the Metropolitan Railway from Baker Streetmap 33 Continuing from Chalfont & Latimer Station Image Opened Additional information Amersham 1 September 1892 Renamed Amersham & Chesham Bois, 12 March 1922, reverted 1937map 34 Depot
The Metropolitan line is served by one depot at Neasden.[1]map 35
Former stations
St John's Wood section
- Lord's (closed 1939)
- Marlborough Road (closed 1939)
- Swiss Cottage (closed 1940)
- These stations have been replaced by underground equivalents on the Jubilee line.
Beyond Amersham
- Great Missenden (service withdrawn 1961)
- Wendover (service withdrawn 1961)
- Stoke Mandeville (service withdrawn 1961)
- Aylesbury (service withdrawn 1961)
- Waddesdon Manor (closed 1936)
- Quainton Road railway station (service withdrawn 1948, closed 1966)
Verney Junction Branch
- Granborough Road (closed 1936)
- Winslow Road (closed 1936)
- Verney Junction (service withdrawn 1936, closed 1967)
Brill Tramway
Main article: Brill TramwayMainline character
The Metropolitan line differs significantly from other London Underground lines, having more of a suburban mainline feel. Only 6 mi (9.7 km) of the line is underground; the other 35.5 mi (57.1 km) are above ground.[2]It has full-size "sub-surface" rolling stock rather than "tube" trains, and it skirts rather than crosses both the West End and the City.
Also, unlike other lines, the Metropolitan operates a mixture of fast, semi-fast, and all-station services.[13] The "fast" services, usually to Amersham or Chesham, call at Baker Street, Finchley Road, Wembley Park (off-peak hours only), Harrow-on-the-Hill, Moor Park and then all stations. There are also semi-fast services, usually just in the peak, which use the fast stopping pattern as far as Harrow-on-the-Hill, but then stop at all stations, usually to Watford. The Metropolitan line does not stop at Jubilee line stations between Finchley Road and Wembley Park.[14]Off peak, the fast services terminate at Baker Street, on Marylebone Road, and do not continue further into the city. Several mainline stations to the North also have terminuses on the same ring road.[15]
The line goes well outside Greater London, serving parts of Hertfordshire and Buckinghamshire. As a result it is the only Underground line to serve Travelcard zones 7, 8 and 9. It does not have any stations in Zone 3, making it the only Underground line serving non-contiguous zones.
The A Stock is fitted with transverse seating only, luggage racks, and umbrella hooks. The new S Stock that is replacing the A Stock has a mix of transverse and longitudinal seating and as a result has 32 per cent fewer seats.[16] The S Stock trains have train-length gangways which allow passengers to move between coaches, like main-line trains.
The fast lines north of Harrow, including all the lines north of Rickmansworth, appear to be signalled to Network Rail standards. However, this is not actually the case. Although standard 4 aspect Network Rail signal heads are installed, they actually use standard LUL signalling [17]. The upper 2 lights are a standard two aspect LUL stop signal displaying either a single green or single red aspect. The lower 2 lights are a standard LUL repeater signal for the next stop signal ahead showing either a single green or single yellow aspect. The repeater indication is suppressed when the stop signal shows a red aspect. Thus although the signal is really 2 signals combined, it nevertheless appears to a train driver as a 3 aspect signal. The danger indication is a single red light; the caution indication (i.e. the next stop signal shows danger) is a yellow light with a green light above it and the clear indication is two green lights. This combination departs from the usual railway standard of having the red light as the lowest light on the signal.
The Metropolitan line is the fastest London Undeground line, with large sections of track being at 50 or 60 mph (80 or 97 km/h) (previously 70 mph (110 km/h)). The normal line speed for an Underground line is 40–45 mph (64–72 km/h). A computerised signal control centre operates from Baker Street covering the line to Aldgate while other signalling points on the line are run locally.[2]
Unusually for the Underground, full timetables are published for the Watford to North Harrow, and Amersham/Chesham to Rickmansworth sections.[13] There is also a less-detailed leaflet covering the Uxbridge to West Harrow section.
Current service pattern
The current off-peak service pattern is as follows:
- 6 trains an hour Uxbridge – Aldgate (all stations)
- 6 trains an hour Watford – Baker Street (all stations)
- 2 trains an hour Amersham – Baker Street (fast). This section is also served by 2 Chiltern Railways trains an hour between Marylebone and Aylesbury, providing 4 trains an hour between Amersham and London.
- 2 trains an hour Chesham – Baker Street (fast).[18]
During weekday peak hours the service is more complex, with trains running between Aldgate and all the four northern terminuses. The service pattern is a 16-minute cycle of six journeys between: (1) Aldgate and alternately Amersham and Chesham (fast), (2) Baker Street and Uxbridge (all stations), (3) Aldgate & Watford (semi-fast), (4) Aldgate and Uxbridge (all stations), (5) Baker Street and Watford (semi-fast), and (6) Aldgate and Uxbridge (all stations).
The first train each morning from Chesham runs directly to Watford via the "north curve" between Rickmansworth and Croxley. Two other early morning trains run directly from Rickmansworth to Watford. The last train from Watford at night runs directly to Rickmansworth.
On 12 December 2010 London Underground reduced the service to Amersham from 4 to 2 trains an hour, and provided a direct service between Chesham and Central London every 30 minutes all day. The 4-car Chesham shuttle service was withdrawn. This change was made because the new S Stock trains come in 8-car sets and there will not be any 4-car trains when the A-class rolling stock is withdrawn. There was no change in the frequency between Chalfont & Latimer and Baker Street, apart from late evening and early Sunday mornings, when 2 of the 6 Watford trains an hour were diverted to Chesham.[18]
Steam on the Met
In 1989, to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the opening of the Metropolitan to Chesham, the first Steam on the Met event took place, with London Underground running two weekends of steam specials between Chesham and Watford.[19]
The event was a great success and so in 1990, London Underground decided to run steam between Harrow and Amersham. In 1992, to celebrate 100 years of the Met at Amersham, the event was extended to 5 days at the end of May. In 1995, it was decided to run trains between Amersham and Watford.[20]
Engines used in the event included BR standard class 4 tank, BR standard class 5, and GWR Pannier tanks. There were also various other rolling stock used as static displays at Rickmansworth sidings. Initially, London Underground hired coaching stock from British Rail for the event, but found that it was actually cheaper to buy coaches instead, thus, LU acquired numerous coaches from BR. The steam trains ran in between normal timetabled Metropolitan and main line services.
Due to the imminent part privatisation of LUL and the condition of the coaching stock, the last Steam excursion took place in 2000. Since 2007, special trains run on the Met using the electric Sarah Siddons and diesel Class 20 locomotives.[21]
Future
Line upgrade work
Track and wiring replacements have been ongoing, with weekend closures of all or parts of the line at weekends.[22] The current signalling equipment on all the subsurface lines, some of which dates from before the Second World War and has become failure-prone, will be replaced with automatic train operation (ATO) controlled from a single new centre.[11][23] The entire line is scheduled to be fully upgraded by the end of 2018.[24]
New trains
The line upgrades are being accompanied by the gradual introduction of the S Stock, which is set to replace the current A Stock trains by 2012. S Stock trains began operating on part of the line on 31 August 2010.[25] As from 27 June 2011, it operates across the entire Metropolitan line network with regular services to all destinations.[citation needed]
Transport for London aims for a 27% increase in line capacity once all upgrade work is complete.[12]
Croxley Rail Link
Main article: Croxley Rail LinkTransport for London and Hertfordshire County Council are developing plans to divert the Watford Branch from the current Watford tube station and reroute it over the disused Croxley Green branch line to Watford Junction. Public consultation commenced in May 2011 with a series of exhibitions held in the town centre and nearby Croxley.
The existing Watford terminus station stands in a housing estate by Cassiobury Park, rather than serving the centre of Watford. If the project goes ahead, the station would be closed and replaced by new stations at Ascot Road and Watford Hospital, thereby serving regeneration sites in west Watford. In February 2011 the Department for Transport placed the project into a "pool" of works that would be subjected to further assessments and a final bid is scheduled to be submitted to the DfT in September 2011. A decision to award funding will be made in December 2011.[26]
Reorganisation
As part of a wider overhaul of the sub-surface lines, there were plans to run Metropolitan line trains from Uxbridge through Aldgate East to Barking, with the Hammersmith and City line taking the Metropolitan's old terminus of Aldgate instead. These plans, if implemented, cannot go forward until the Metropolitan line's stock is totally replaced, as its trains are not permitted to travel beyond Aldgate due to technical reasons[why?].
Maps
References
- ^ a b "London Underground Key Facts". Transport for London. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/modesoftransport/londonunderground/1608.aspx. Retrieved 21 May 2008.
- ^ a b c "Line facts – Metropolitan". Transport for London. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/tfl/corporate/modesoftransport/tube/linefacts/?line=metropolitan.
- ^ London Underground. "Corporate identity – colour standards". Transport for London. http://static.scribd.com/docs/6wfl4g62vle8w.swf?INITIAL_VIEW=width. Retrieved 22 December 2007.
- ^ London Underground. "FAQ". Transport for London. https://custserv.tfl.gov.uk/icss_csip/GetDetailInformation.do?entityNum=00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000002672&kbname=SDB&src=searchSolution&newTabtext=Tube. Retrieved 12 May 2009.
- ^ Day, John R.; Reed, John (2008) [1963]. The Story of London's Underground (10th ed.). Harrow: Capital Transport. p. 9. ISBN 978 1 85414 316 7.
- ^ Wolmar, Christian (2005). The Subterranean Railway (Revised & Updated Edition). London: Atlantic Books. p. 36. ISBN 1-84354-023-1
- ^ Day & Reed 2008, pp. 10–12
- ^ Day & Reed 2008, pp. 8,13–14
- ^ Day & Reed 2008, pp. 18,20
- ^ "Line facts". Transport for London. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/tfl/corporate/modesoftransport/tube/linefacts/?line=metropolitan#section-3. Retrieved 27 January 2011.
- ^ a b c Waboso, David (December 2010). "Transforming the tube". Modern Railways (London): pp. 42–45.
- ^ a b "Tube Upgrade Plan: Metropolitan line". Transport for London. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/projectsandschemes/18097.aspx. Retrieved 18 June 2011.
- ^ a b "Metropolitan Line services, tracks, ...". John Francis Rowland. Archived from the original on 27 October 2009. http://web.archive.org/web/20091027142803/http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/7069/metserv.html.
- ^ "CULG Jubilee line". Clive Feather. http://www.davros.org/rail/culg/jubilee.html.
- ^ "CULG Metropolitan". Clive Feather. http://www.davros.org/rail/culg/metropolitan.html.
- ^ "A60/62 stock". SQUAREWHEELS.org.uk. http://www.squarewheels.org.uk/rly/stock/AsubsurfaceStock/.
- ^ British Railway Signalling - G M Kichenside & Alan Williams
- ^ a b "Chesham trains to run direct into Central London" (Press release). Transport for London. 7 December 2010. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/media/newscentre/archive/17617.aspx. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
- ^ www.metroland.org.uk. "Steam on the Met". http://www.metroland.org.uk/steamonthemet/index.htm.
- ^ Geoffrey King. "Steam on the Met". http://www.offshed.com/mainline/showcategory.php?catID=13.
- ^ "Not quite Steam on the Met". http://www.peat.me.uk/2008/08/30/not-quite-steam-on-the-met./
- ^ Proctor, Ian (14 May 2010). "Passenger group tells Tube bosses "Met Line upgrades essential"". Harrow Observer. http://www.harrowobserver.co.uk/west-london-news/local-harrow-news/2010/05/14/passenger-group-tells-tube-bosses-met-line-upgrades-essential-116451-26447370/. Retrieved 2 February 2011.
- ^ Cracknell, James (15 December 2010). "Softly, softly: trains make their debut". Uxbridge Gazette. http://www.uxbridgegazette.co.uk/west-london-news/local-uxbridge-news/2010/12/15/softly-softly-trains-make-their-debut-113046-27830629/. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
- ^ "Tube upgrade plan timeline". Transport for London. February 2011. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloads/corporate/tube_upgrade_plan_timeline.pdf.
- ^ "'S' stock making its mark". Modern Railways (London): p. 46. December 2010.
- ^ Pickard, Michael (8 February 2011). "Croxley Rail Link fight 'far from over'". Watford Observer. http://www.watfordobserver.co.uk/news/8839387.Rail_link_fight__far_from_over_/. Retrieved 8 February 2011.
Further reading
- Foxell, Clive (2010). The Metropolitan Line. History Press. ISBN 978 0 7524 5396 5.
External links
- "Metropolitan line facts". Transport for London. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/tfl/corporate/modesoftransport/tube/linefacts/?line=metropolitan. Retrieved 11 July 2008.
- "Metropolitan Line". Clive's Underground Line Guide. http://www.davros.org/rail/culg/metropolitan.html. Retrieved 11 July 2008.
- "Railways Around Amersham & The Metropolitan Line". Metro-land. http://www.metroland.org.uk/. Retrieved 11 July 2008.
Metropolitan line Stations Central London sectionAldgate · Barbican · Euston Square · Farringdon · Great Portland Street · King's Cross St. Pancras · Liverpool Street · MoorgateCore sectionUxbridge branchOuter section & branchesAmersham · Chalfont & Latimer · Chesham · Chorleywood · Croxley · Moor Park · North Harrow · Northwood · Northwood Hills · Pinner · Rickmansworth · Watford
Click to enlargeRolling stock Present rolling stockHistory Former companiesClosed stationsBrill · Granborough Road · Lord's · Marlborough Road · Quainton Road · Swiss Cottage · Uxbridge Road · Verney Junction · Waddesdon · Waddesdon Road · Westcott · Winslow Road · Wood Siding · WottonFormer stationsAylesbury · Dollis Hill · Great Missenden · Kensington (Olympia) · Kilburn · Neasden · Stoke Mandeville · Wendover · West Hampstead · Willesden GreenTransferred linesFormer rolling stockFormer locomotivesA Class · B Class · C Class · D Class · E Class · F Class · G Class · H Class · K Class · Met Electric Camelback · MetVick Electric BoBo · Metropolitan departmental · ex GWR · Metropolitan Railway Peckett Saddle Tank · Wotton TramwayMetro-LandFuture proposals Croxley Rail linkCroxley Rail Link · Ascot Road · Croxley · Croxley Green · Watford High Street · Watford Junction · Watford Stadium · Watford WestFuture rolling stockS Stock (Currently being rolled out)OtherWest Hampstead interchangeCategories:- London Underground lines
- Railway lines opened in 1863
- Transport in Brent
- Transport in Camden
- Transport in the City of London
- Transport in Harrow
- Rail transport in Hertfordshire
- Transport in Hillingdon
- Transport in Islington
- Transport in Westminster
- Amersham
- Standard gauge railways in England
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