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He'd prefer London, and cities like it, mount two maps throughout their transit systems: An easy-to-read route one, and one depicting the way the city actually looks, to scale.
After a Freedom of Information request, London's transportation authority finally created a Tube map that shows the actual distance between stops.
Transport For London and the Black Cultural Archives released a reimagined "Black History Tube Map," renaming train stations after prominent Black figures.
For all you map lovers: These beautiful transit maps have been with us since the 19th century, and now they're in every major city -- but for how long?
The bedrock of the map is a network of established routes such as TfL's Cycleways, the National Cycle Network, and the older London Cycle Network.
London Transit Commission has started rolling out its long-awaited online booking system for paratransit users, which the organization anticipates will be fully functioning by the end of May.
It might just be the greatest graphic design challenge of all: How do you straighten out the spaghetti bowl that is the London Tube, Paris Metro, or New York City Subway to make an easy-to-use transit ...
What if the MTA's subway map looked more like London's? One graphic designer set out to answer the question, with fascinating results.
Visualize London's Underground With This Mesmerizing Interactive 3-D Map It's hard to imagine the intricate transit tubes that snake beneath the London skyline.
Transport for London (TfL) actually has a handy walking Tube map which reveals how many minutes on average it takes to walk between stations.
The London transit authority’s rarely publicized, geographically correct map of the London Underground subway system is making the rounds, and it’s a little unsettling.
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