About 3 miles.
effective Distance between the two points or we can say two stations.....
Type your answer here..waterloo Charing Cross, Euston, Kings Cross, Liverpool Street, London Bridge, Marylebone, Paddington, St. Pancras, Victoria, Waterloo.
The different between suspension bridge and beam bridge are beam bridge are for short distance but suspension bridge for long distance. Beam bridge are used for highway passes and suspension bridge for wide waterway passes.
16 miles
The span
The span
If the question is which type of bridge the answer is a suspension bridge.
The span is the distance between supports. The sum of the span lengths is the bridge length.
The largest and busiest are in London. There are many London Terminals: Waterloo (for South of England) Victoria (for Sussex) Charing Cross and London Bridge (for Kent) Liverpool Street (for East Anglia) Euston (for the West Coast and most major cities) King's Cross (for Scotland and the East Coast) Paddington (for the Southwest of England and West Midlands) Marylebone (for High Wycombe) Fenchurch Street (for Southend) St Pancras (for the Eurostar and East Midlands) Other large maor stations include Glasgow Central, Birmingham New Street, Manchester Piccadilly, Leeds, Liverpool Lime Street, Edinburgh Waverley, Cardiff Central, Glasgow Queen Street, Reading and Sheffield.
The bridge holds/supports the strings. The distance between the bridge and nut is the string length.
100 miles
Each station was named when it was built: Waterloo - after Waterloo Bridge, in turn named after the Battle of Waterloo Victoria - after Queen Victoria London Bridge - after the bridge itself Blackfriars - after Blackfriars Bridge, named after a former monastery Charing Cross, King's Cross - after road junctions Liverpool Street, Fenchurch Street, Cannon Street - after streets Paddington, Marylebone, St Pancras, Euston, Clapham Junction - after districts