Marble Arch tube station

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Marble Arch
Marble Arch
Location
Place Oxford Street
Local authority Westminster
Operations
Managed by London Underground
Platforms in use 2
Annual entry/exit 10.049 million
Transport for London
Zone 1
History
Key dates Opened 1900
Transport for London
List of London stations: Underground | National Rail

Marble Arch is a London Underground station in the City of Westminster. The station is between Lancaster Gate and Bond Street stations on the Central Line, and is in Travelcard Zone 1.

Contents

[edit] History

The station was opened on 30 July 1900 by the Central London Railway (CLR).

Like all the original stations on the CLR, Marble Arch was served by lifts to the platforms but the station was reconstructed in the early 1930s to accommodate escalators. This saw the closure of the original station building, designed by the architect Harry Bell Measures, that was situated on the corner of Quebec Street and Oxford Street, and a replacement sub-surface ticket hall opened further to the west. The new arrangements came into use on 15 August 1932. The original surface building was later demolished.

During The Blitz, on 17 September 1940, a bomb hit the station and 20 people using it as an air-raid shelter were killed.

[edit] The station today

The station is named after the Marble Arch nearby and is located at the north east side of the Marble Arch junction, at the western end of Oxford Street.

[edit] Transport connections

It is on London Buses route 2, 10, route 15, 16, 30, 36, 73, 74, 82, 137, 148, 159, 414 and 436.

[edit] External links

Preceding station Underground Lines Following station
Lancaster Gate   Central Line   Bond Street