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The station was renamed Queenstown Road (Battersea), to go with the road, on 12 May 1980. [2] The station's modern entrance and platform signage lacks the "(Battersea)" suffix that appears in timetables and on some maps. The latest "Oyster Rail Services" map produced by Transport for London shows the station as plain "Queenstown Road". [4]
Closeburn is a locality in Queenstown-Lakes District in the South Island of New Zealand. It is located a 10-minute drive from Queenstown on the Glenorchy–Queenstown Road. [3] Closeburn Station is a working farm in the area and is less than 2,000 hectares (4,900 acres) in size. It is owned by 27 shareholders.
Queens Road station may refer to these stations in London: Queens Road Peckham railway station; Queens Road (GER) railway station, a proposed station; Queensway tube station, formerly called Queen's Road; Walthamstow Queen's Road railway station; Queenstown Road railway station formerly called Queen's Road (Battersea)
The eastern end is an approximately ten-minute walk from several smaller stations, notably Wandsworth Road railway station, Clapham Common Underground station and Queenstown Road railway station. In the 1890s Lavender Hill was developed as a major tram route , with tram route 26 running along Lavender Hill on the way from Kew Bridge to London ...
The railway was the only way to get copper from the mine at Queenstown to markets. Until 1932, when a Hobart road link was completed, it was the only access through to Queenstown. The railway utilised the Abt rack and pinion system for steep sections. Because of the gradients, tonnages were always limited on the railway.
MD 18U is the designation for a 0.02-mile (0.032 km) section of Jackson Creek Road that serves as the ramps of the right-in/right-out interchange (exit 43A) between the intersection of Jackson Creek Road, Saddler Road (unsigned MD 835B), and Long Point Road and westbound US 50/US 301 in Grasonville.
A 1908 Railway Clearing House map of lines around the approaches to London Bridge. The station opened with the line on 13 August 1866, and had two wooden side platforms and an intermediate centre platform to serve the third centre line. [3] Until 1911 passenger trains ran to the East London line, stopping at Old Kent Road.
Battersea Park is a suburban railway station in the London Borough of Wandsworth, south London.It is at the junction of the South London line and the Brighton Main Line (although the physical connection between the lines has been removed), 1 mile 23 chains (2.1 km) measured from London Victoria.