ON THE TILES
Tiled signs and murals have been used on the Underground for
over a century. Some you will have noticed, but others maybe not.
The Piccadilly Line at first ran from Hammersmith to
Finsbury Park, as this sign at Hyde Park Corner (it’s in the cross passage
opposite where the lift shaft used to be) suggests. So what could one get up to
at the latter terminus?
Finsbury Park back then was known for ballooning, hence this
mural on the northbound Piccadilly Line platform there.
Some stations have changed identities over the years:
Marylebone was known for a while as Great Central, after the company which
built the main line station.
And Warren Street was initially called Euston Road, but then
the potential for confusion with Euston and Euston Square was probably too
much.
The Victoria Line brought station-specific murals: that for
Euston featured the long-vanished Arch, but it had been demolished when the
line opened in 1968.
Baker Street’s platforms celebrate its association with the
occupant of Number 221B.
And Paddington, presumably because of the Brunel connection,
includes this engineering drawing mural.
Not strictly tiled, but still distinctive, is the display at
Charing Cross (itself formerly called Strand or Trafalgar Square, depending on
which line we’re talking).
And a recent tiled mural at Bank shows the Roundel flanked
by griffins.
That’s enough tiles – next will come the modern architecture
of the system.
2 comments:
"Not strictly tiled, but still distinctive, is the display at Charing Cross (itself formally called Strand or Trafalgar Square, depending on which line we’re talking)."
"formally" or "formerly"?
Duly corrected. Good to see you got that far down the post.
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