Sometimes pitch black is not what’s directly external a subway car’s window. You may notice an empty, dark, dusty platform as your train speeds forward. Or you might see the tunnel’s wall switch from cast iron tube to a brick wall. In major subway systems all through the world, there are abandoned stations that one wouldn’t necessarily notice unless one were to be staring external the subway window. Parisians know that Croix-Rouge or Saint-Martin are not stations in the Métro system. Daily Tube riders can say that the Piccadilly Line does not stop at Brompton Road or Down Street. And New York Subway riders know that the 6 does not stop at East 18th Street and Park Avenue. For many of the world’s abandoned stations, low patronage caused their closures. Others were closed considering stations were too shut to each other. Since speed is extremely critical, eliminating redundant stops is the best way to speed up trains. Other stations were closed when the subway system was extending platforms. A few stations were replaced
hyperlinks:
London’s Abandoned Tube Stations
Disused Stations on the London Underground
Abandoned Stations of New York’s Subway
Nuit dans le métro (Night in the Metro) - Paris
Les stations fantômes (Paris)
Photo from the London Borough of Tower Hamlets Archives.
Original post by Alexander Lew

























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