Area photos


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(51.5381 -0.11897, 51.538 -0.118) 


LOCAL PHOTOS
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The British Library
TUM image id: 1482066417
Licence: CC BY 2.0
Goods Way - old sign
TUM image id: 1526241892
Licence: CC BY 2.0
Risinghill Street, N1
TUM image id: 1467032267
Licence: CC BY 2.0

In the neighbourhood...

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Kings Place from York Way
Credit: Alan Stanton
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Caledonian Road looking north towards Holloway
Old London postcard
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Goods Way - old sign
Licence: CC BY 2.0


York Road was the name for a ’lost’ underground station on the Piccadilly Line north of King’s Cross and south of Caledonian Road. Traffic levels were never high, and the station closed in 1932, on the same day that the northern extension of the Piccadilly Line from Finsbury Park to Arnos Grove opened. London Transport Museum runs tours of the station through its "Hidden London" programme. The tour features original elements of the station including the tiled lift lobby and signal cabin and it explores the modifications that were made to the station over the years. The road it was named after has also changed its name (to York Way)
Credit: The Underground Map
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York Road station when it was open. This used to be the first station north on the Piccadilly Line after King’s Cross St Pancras. Plans to reopen it have so far come to nothing.
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Keystone Crescent, just on the side of King’s Cross station, has the smallest radius of any crescent in Europe, and has collection of old preserved houses
Credit: Flickr/Barbara Smith
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The former Pentonville Cottages awaiting demolition
Credit: London Metropolitan Archives
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An old London bus being drawn by horses on its way to St Pancras Goods Station (1937) Next, its roof will be removed to enable it to fit on a railway trolley and then it will be transported to Chesterfield, Derbyshire for breaking up.
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