London Bridge is in Zone 1 and it's served by the Northern and Jubilee lines. The station is situated near the River Thames and close by are the riverboat services. These are some of the popular ways to get to London Bridge by Tube.
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London Bridge Underground Station is on the Northern Line and Jubilee Line, with regular Tube services connecting to north, south, east, west and central London, as well as Night Tube services on the Jubilee Line.
Five Tube lines run a 24-hour service on Fridays and Saturdays: Victoria, Central, Jubilee, Northern and Piccadilly lines. The London Overground operates 24 hours on Fridays and Saturdays between New Cross Gate and Highbury & Islington. Off-peak fares apply on the Night Tube.
Elizabeth Line, Thameslink, Southeastern are the main train operating companies running services between Canary Wharf (Elizabeth line) and London Bridge. There are 6 possible routes with the shortest and most direct being Canary Wharf (Elizabeth Line) to London Bridge.
The nearest Tube station to the palace is St James's Park, which is served by the Circle and District lines. A walk along Petty France and Buckingham Gate – which typically takes fewer than 10 minutes – leads to the palace on Constitution Hill.
The new figure means that each mile of the 10-mile section of line is costing £330 million - the same as for each mile of the £10 billion Channel Tunnel. In comparison, the French have just constructed their new line 14 on the Paris Metro for less than half the price: £120 million a mile.
As well as having the highest top speed, the Metropolitan line also has the highest average speed - 28.3mph. The second highest average speed is the Victoria line (25.2mph) followed by the Jubilee line (24.3mph).