Recently Tottenham Court Road is being rebuilt, due to the brand new service of Crossrail.Find out more about Crossrail on Wikipedia.
Waterloo. There is an overground and underground station, both called Waterloo. There is also a station adjacent to the main station called Waterloo East. Waterloo International is now closed and its services transferred to St Pancras International.
A closed Tube Station would be "Hammersmith Broadway".
The station was closed to be restored in the 2000s
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).
Lincoln St. Marks station was closed in 1985 when services were diverted to the nearby Lincoln Central station. If you mean another St. Marks station you will have to ask again, specifying which station.
The London Underground is usually a very busy place. It is best to travel out of the rush hour if possible. There are maps available for all routes so it is a good idea for the person traveling to become familiar with the route that they will be using. Also, sometimes the lines can be closed so always check online before traveling.
They closed because the plague had broken out in London at that time. They reopened late in 1594.
Because the underground tunnel was closed.
The fate of the Shoreditch tube station was sealed when the station closed permanently in 2006.
one underground path goes from celadon to viridian. there is a second path, but it is permanently closed.
The first underground railway in London ran from what is now Paddington Bishop's Road (officially Paddington Suburban or Paddington (H&C)) and to Farringdon along the current route of Hammersmith and City. This was more of a railway than an underground line though, as it was served by steam trains. The first proper underground railway in it's modern definition (small, almost circular tunnels) was ran by City & South London Railway between Stockwell and King William Street. King William Street is now closed, but it was near current Bank station. The C&SLR trains ran along Northern Line's current tracks, except between London Bridge and King William Street, where there was another set of tracks. The King William Street tracks were disconnected from the network when C&SLR was extended north to Angel.
no