Central, Circle, District, Metropolitan, Waterloo.
Heathrow Tube line Piccadilly goes to Heathrow terminal 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
All of them are under downtown London.
Many people commute into London for work. It is estimated that around 750,000 make the trip into England's capital every day.
London Underground's (Tube) Picadilly Line goes to Heathrow Terminal 5. This is the cheapest AND the slowest way to get to Heathrow. However, the Heathrow Express train, which costs £32 for return ticket, will get you comfortably within 20 minutes from Terminal 5 to the Paddington Station in the centere of London. see also these links for more info: Transport for London- http://www.tfl.gov.uk/ British Airways- http://www.terminal5.ba.com/en/to-and-from-terminal-5/london-underground/ Note: Only half of the Heathrow branch Piccadilly trains go to Terminal 5, so you will have to change at either Hatton Cross or Terminal 1,2,3 station if you aren't on this train
About 5 miles.
the tower of London is just south of Tower Hill Tube Station
Oxford Circus, Vauxhall, Croxley, BrixtonNote: Some stations are shortened to include an X like Charing X, Kings X, etcAlso: Saint is sometimes shortened to X but never on Lodnon Underground so St John's Wood is never X John's Wood.Add Uxbridge to make 5 London Tube stations containing the letter X.
51, 32 N, 0, 5 W
It is because the tube tunnels are deep and poorly ventilated.Also, 80% of the heat is produced by train operation, 15% from other equipment and 5% from people.In some of deeper lines, there is no air conditioning due to the lack of space for equipment on trains and the problems of dispersing the waste heat these would generate.Read: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Underground_coolingJuicebox
Sketch London restaurant is located in London on 9 Conduit street, postcode W1S 2XG it is closest to the the train stop at Oxford Circus which is a 5 minute walk when you take the tube from the Victoria line.
I assume you refer to Ongar, which was closed in 1994. It was situated on the Central line, east of Epping (further from central London).
Most subway stations in the Bronx are above ground, but there are a few underground stations as well. The elevated lines, such as the 2 and 5 trains, primarily run above street level, while the 4 train has a section that is underground. Overall, the Bronx has a mix of both elevated and underground subway stations.