Sunday, 7 May 2017

154. Blackhorse Road


Saturday 6th May 7.00pm

This is one of those stations on a corner at a junction so you don't see it until you're on top of it, although to be honest the building was nothing special.

The tiling is fairly straightforward:


Wikipedia entry here.

That completes all the station on the Victoria line! I thought it would be the first line I'd complete because it has the least (fewest?) amount of stations on it but it turns out I have no real need to be in east London. I am rather fond of it as a line though, partly because it's a nice blue colour but also because it's has no confusing branches to trick you.

153. Walthamstow Central


Saturday 6th May 6.30pm

I was surprised by how busy the train was when it got to this station although I don't know why I should assume the end of the line would be quiet as this is a really busy area with a market all the way down Walthamstow High Street and bus and train stations very close by. I didn't notice what the station was like, which usually means it's fairly nondescript.

The tiling is slightly baffling - what's this got to do with the local area? I guess that by the end of the line they'd simply run out of inspiration:


Wikipedia entry here.

152. Seven Sisters


Saturday 6th May 10.20am

This seems to have no surface building and you get into it from a subway beside a busy road, which I guess makes it a proper underground station although I do miss an interesting building at street level.

The tiling is a slightly awkward arrangement of seven trees which the area gets its name from:


Earlier in the year the Overground station was briefly all over the internet when someone took a picture of seven nuns on the station next to the name sign but sadly there were none about when I visited and it was actually really quiet.

Wikipedia entry here.

151. Tottenham Hale


Saturday 6th May 10.00am

I've been to the station here before when King's Cross has been shut and mainline services have terminated here. The train station is a modern glass box but the underground station is exactly like you'd expect a Victoria line station to be, and exits onto a slightly windswept plaza next to an industrial estate, which is a bit bleak.

In common with all the stations on the Victoria line - although I haven't always noticed this - it has tiling that specifically relates to the station, although quite how this does escapes me - it reminds me of Moses being abandoned in the bulrushes (lets assume he'sin the basket), but I hadn't realised he was from east London:


Wikipedia entry here.