News

A man has died after being hit by a Central line train at Tottenham Court Road station. Police and Paramedics rushed to the busy London station shortly before 11.30pm on Thursday.
Remember when Tottenham Court Road used to have multiple entrances, the Paolozzi mosaics and, er, the Central line? It looks like normal service is finally on its way to resuming as a second new ...
Northern Line trains will continue to stop at Tottenham Court Road. By 2016, TfL said the station will be fully accessible and the ticket hall will be five times larger than its current size ...
The Central line is to be closed off at Tottenham Court Road station in London for nearly a year starting January 2015, as the station is rebuilt and Crossrail is tied to it.
Tottenham Court Road station escalators Chunks of city had to be razed at both ends of the station. Despite the symbolic nod to Soho nightlife of the new design, this notably involved the demolition ...
TOTTENHAM Court Road tube station in London has been evacuated after a woman was hit by a train. Commuters are facing travel chaos as they make their way to work following this morning’s trag… ...
Central line trains won't stop at Tottenham Court Road station from 3 January until the middle of December, as part of the major works programme to upgrade the station ahead of Crossrail.
A statement from British Transport Police said: "We’ve been called to Tottenham Court Road after a report a person was struck by a train on a Central Line platform. Police were alerted just ...
The line reopened at 9.40 and Tottenham Court Road station was reopened to passengers 10 minutes later. A TfL spokesperson said: “The station was closed this morning with a person under a train.
From Saturday, Central Line trains will not stop at Tottenham Court Road Tube passengers are set to have their journeys disrupted for almost a year when Central Line trains cease stopping at one ...
‘The idea was to distinguish the different exits: the western one being dark, reflecting that it leads more into Soho with its night-time economy; and the other, eastern one lighter and brighter,’ ...