PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Watford tube station
rdfs:comment
  • The station building was designed by the Metropolitan Railway's architect Charles Walter Clark in an Arts and Crafts vernacular style. It is in red brick with a clay-tiled hipped roof, tall brick chimney stacks, and timber sash and casement windows. The main entrance is covered by a polygonal metal canopy supported by twin Doric columns, and the interior, mostly unaltered from the original, is decorated with period tiling and hardwood panelling. On 2010 data it is the 25th most lightly-used station on the London Underground.
owl:sameAs
image name
  • Watford Tube Station.JPG
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:uk-transport/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:uktransport/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Platforms
  • 2
fare zone
  • 7
Events
  • Opened
  • Goods yard closed
tubecode
  • ZWT
Name
  • Watford
Locale
Manager
borough
Line
  • Metropolitan
System
  • LUL
Symbol
  • underground
Years
  • 1925
  • 1966-11-14
tubeexits
  • 1.504000
  • 1.620000
  • 1.642000
Latitude
  • 51.657500
map type
  • Hertfordshire
Longitude
  • -0.417500
NEXT
  • Croxley
Route
abstract
  • The station building was designed by the Metropolitan Railway's architect Charles Walter Clark in an Arts and Crafts vernacular style. It is in red brick with a clay-tiled hipped roof, tall brick chimney stacks, and timber sash and casement windows. The main entrance is covered by a polygonal metal canopy supported by twin Doric columns, and the interior, mostly unaltered from the original, is decorated with period tiling and hardwood panelling. On 2010 data it is the 25th most lightly-used station on the London Underground.