London Underground: Nine Elms and Battersea Power Station set to open

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Battersea Power StationImage source, TfL
Image caption,

Trains from the two stations will run on the Charing Cross branch of the Northern Line

Two new London Underground stations are set to open in south London this month.

Construction of Nine Elms and Battersea Power Station, which are both step-free and in zone one, began in 2015. They were originally due to open last year.

Six trains an hour will serve them at peak times when they first open to passengers on 20 September, with the number doubling to 12 an hour in 2022.

The two stations are the first to be added to the Northern Line since Morden opened in 1926.

The vast majority of London Underground's 270 stations are north of the river, with the latest additions taking the south London tally above 30 for the first time.

Image source, TfL
Image caption,

The Tube map has two new additions

Kennington station will move into zone 1/2 as part of the changes to the line.

The last major Tube expansion was the Jubilee Line extension, when six new stations opened in 1999.

Speaking about the new stations, Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said: "They will hugely improve connectivity between these two areas and the rest of London, and play a major part in the capital's recovery from the pandemic by supporting thousands of new jobs, homes and businesses".

Image source, TfL
Image caption,

At off-peak times the two stations will initially see five trains an hour, rising to 10 every hour next year

Image source, TfL
Image caption,

Nine Elms station was originally due to open in 2020

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