Uxbridge_tube_station Uxbridge_tube_station

Uxbridge tube station - Definition and Overview

Uxbridge Tube station
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Uxbridge Tube station

Uxbridge is the terminus for the Uxbridge branches of both the Piccadilly Line and the Metropolitan Line of the London Underground.

The Uxbridge branch opened for the Metropolitan Line on 4 July 1904, and for the Piccadilly Line on 23 October 1933. The original station was replaced by the current one on a new site a few hundred yards away on 4 December 1938.

Uxbridge's original station was located in Belmont Road (now used as sidings) and was constructed with a view to a possible extension of the Metropolitan line. The original station had two platforms - one each for the Metropolitan line and District Line, (the latter being replaced by the Piccadilly Line).

The frontage of the station is an attractive brick building, with some interesting railway inspired sculptures above the main entrance, and the canopy over the platforms is a concrete and glass structure. There are some marked similarities between this station and Cockfosters, the terminus at the northern end of the Piccadilly Line.

The forecourt of the new station was originally laid out to provide a turning circle for trolleybuses, which had replaced the local trams in 1936.

Preceding station Underground Lines Following station
Terminus   Metropolitan Line   Hillingdon
  Piccadilly Line  


Example Usage of Uxbridge

pete173: School visit and assembly at S Andrew Uxbridge this morning; Confirmation at S John Hackney tonight. Weather is interesting!
ConsultJob: Recruitment Consultant - Commercial Perms - Uxbridge -... http://jobsurl.com/124eac
Lynn_H_I: Uxbridge is calling. After 2wks of duvet time I gotta go back to work :-( Maybe I could sneak off to Westfield and gaze through the windows
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