

- #Tokyo quickmap pdf#
- #Tokyo quickmap drivers#
- #Tokyo quickmap full#
- #Tokyo quickmap android#
- #Tokyo quickmap professional#
#Tokyo quickmap professional#
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#Tokyo quickmap android#
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#Tokyo quickmap drivers#
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* 24/7 speed, accident, & construction coverage I hope these suggestions are of interest to you.Save time, save money, and save yourself from the hassles of traffic jams with Sigalert - right from your phone or tablet. Slightly longer walks but "do-able" is you are reasonably fit are:-Ĥ): Edgware (Northern Line) to Canons Park (Jubilee Line)ĥ): Buckhurst Hill (Central Line Epping branch) to Roding Valley (Central Line Hainault Loop)Ħ): Angel (Northern Line) to Highbury & Islington (Victoria Line and National Rail) via Upper Street. Might I take the liberty of suggesting a few additional walks between stations?ġ): Snaresbrook (Central Line Epping branch) to WansteadĢ): Old Street to Liverpool Street - through the Broadgate complex, this is a lot quicker than going by train via Moorgateģ): Cutty Sark and Island Gardens (Docklands Light Railway) through the Greenwich foot tunnel I think you have done a fantastic job and wish I had thought of the idea! this evening and immediately looked it up. Heard about your map on the BBC London News at 6.30 p.m. London Open Guides's Adjacent Stations is a list of stations where you can walk in 15min or less. And Owen Massey has the mother-lode of tube map variants, versions and varia. Also: MUDLondon, muxway, geo-wanking and Antimega are all good for geo/mapping stuff. Found some more accurate station-to-station distances at Diamond Geezer, who reminds us that you can get this info from the TfL route planner. The original tube map used is here (385k gif), and is obviously copyright Transport For London.They look like un-named constellations (20k gif) big version here. And indeed it might be interesting, for arty folk, to see the walklines without the original tube map behind it.And here's the same with the tube map faded out slightly, so you see the walklines more easily.And these are interesting places to walk anyway. The dense knots are Euston-Warren Street-Gt Portland St in Bloomsbury and Bank-Cannon St-Mansion House-St Paul's in the city.

#Tokyo quickmap full#
Nb: our photo album constrains the size of the picture, so click the big versions of these pictures if you want to see them full size) big version here.
#Tokyo quickmap pdf#
tube map with 500m walklines dotted in (warning: it's a large 429k gif file, pdf to follow possibly.So it's not an improvement on the map, but it's an interesting exercise. It doesn't look great yet, and definitely reduces the readability of the standard tube map at the moment, which isn't a good thing. This has been discussed on Edward Tufte's site and in many other places, and there are geographically corrected versions of the map.īut here's a slightly altered map showing which stations are an arbitrary and as-the-crow-flies 500 metres apart from each other (there are many more stations 600, 700+ metres from each other). One of the very few weaknesses of the standard tube map is that its distortion of geography (a very successful attempt to present the different stations and lines more clearly) sometimes means that it's not clear when the tube trip is unnecessary. Possibly, even Finchley Road to Hampstead (change twice, 9 stops) could be walked in half an hour, although what neither the standard tube map nor the A-Z map will tell you is that it's up a steep hill. Mansion House to Bank: change once, 6 stops - as noted by Bill Bryson in Notes From a Small Island (though you could walk to Bank districtline, aka Monument, and go in two stops, but his point is still well made). Sometimes it's quicker and easier to walk.įor instance: Leicester Square is only 250m from Covent Garden Charing Cross to Embankment is about 300m Chancery Lane to Farringdon by tube requires two changes and 4 stations. For some journeys it's really not worth getting on the tube: it takes a long time, and costs you money.
