Funny, whenever I see a photo of ‘the tube’, I can smell that electric burning odour, feel the warm dry whoooshes of air and remember what it’s like to sit on the stiff brush like tube seats material.
Funny, whenever I see a photo of ‘the tube’, I can smell that electric burning odour, feel the warm dry whoooshes of air and remember what it’s like to sit on the stiff brush like tube seats material.
- The Italians in Switzerland speak different Italian from the Italians in Italy - who knew!

Apologies for the intrusion..... AFAIK, it's not just the Italians...I believe the Germans in Switzerland also speak different German from the Germans in Germany....
As you were gentlemen![]()
the only germans in switzerland are touristsI believe the Germans in Switzerland also speak different German from the Germans in Germany....![]()
100% Even the names of the stations such as Chalk Farm give plain-sight clues as to what Old London might have been like.TfL make a great job of running a vast underground network, carrying millions of passengers a year safely and pretty much efficiently, over parts of the network where (the tunnels at least) date back to the early days of steam.
That is before you add in the ‘overground’ network that also falls within TfL’s orbit.
There is a huge difference between the lines, the Northern Line trains being physically much smaller than the modern trains found on, say, the Circle, District and Jubilee Lines. Likewise, the stations are different, often telling their own architectural story or mapping the growth of London outwards to the suburbs.
We (London plc) are very lucky to have such a good and pretty much well functioning public transport system. No question about it.
I find it strangely melancholy but comforting.Funny, whenever I see a photo of ‘the tube’, I can smell that electric burning odour, feel the warm dry whoooshes of air and remember what it’s like to sit on the stiff brush like tube seats material.