The Battersea Power Station was one of two new London Underground stations to open on Monday. All photos: Getty Images
Public transport enthusiasts flock to Battersea Power Station as the new London Underground stop opens.
Peter Torre enjoys the moment after becoming the first person to travel the full length of the Northern Line to the end of its latest extension, with the opening of Nine Elms and Battersea Power Station.
Passengers wait for the first train to leave Battersea Power Station.
A transport enthusiast wears a London Underground map facemask as he travels on the first train leaving Battersea Power Station.
Nine Elms underground station after it opens for business.
Nine Elms and Battersea Power Station are areas of London that have undergone extensive redevelopment in recent years. Getty Images
The historic power station at Battersea, south-west London, which closed in 1983, will reopen next summer as a home to shops, restaurants and the main UK office of Apple. Getty Images
This £1.1 billion ($1.5bn) Transport for London project has added about 3.2 kilometres of tunnel, as well as the two stations, and the extension is the first on the underground network since the Jubilee Line stretched eastwards in 1999.
Two new London Underground stations were unveiled on Monday, connecting Battersea Power Station and Nine Elms to central London via the Northern Line.
London Mayor Sadiq Khan hailed the introduction of the sites to the network only weeks after pupils returned to schools and employees to workplaces, many for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic.
This is the first major expansion of the Tube since the Jubilee Line stretched eastward in 1999.
“We’ve opened the first major Tube extension this century, the first station to the Northern Line for more than 80 years," Mr Khan told Sky News on Monday.
“And what we’ve done is take the Tube to Battersea for the first time. It’s helping to support more than 25,000 jobs, including in Battersea Power Station, and more than 20,000 homes.”
He said the additional services would play “a major role” in London’s recovery from the Covid crisis.
The first train left Battersea Power Station at 5.28am.
Richard Gowers, a musician, took to Twitter to share photos of his early morning journey.
He said: “Once in a lifetime chance to take the first EVER Northern Line train (05:28) from Battersea Power Station. Yeah I know, I play the organ. All part of the job.”
Geoff Marshall, who runs a transport-themed YouTube channel, also posted pictures on social media showing himself in a crowded carriage on the first train to depart Battersea.
He wrote: “Yes we rode the first train! 05.28 out of Battersea Power Station …. station. It’s open!”
Commuters walk from Nine Elms underground station after it opened for the first time. Getty Images
The opening of the new stations marks the culmination of a £1.1 billion ($1.5bn) project to extend the Northern Line into south-west London from its previous end point at Kennington.
Billions of pounds of investment have been pumped into the former industrial zone on the bank of the River Thames.
Battersea Power Station, a former coal-fired energy plant, was completed in 1935 and was in operation for decades before it closed in the early 1980s.
The site, noted for its Art Deco interior, has been transformed into office space and homes.
The Grade II* listed building is scheduled to open its doors to the public in 2022.
It will house more than 100 shops, restaurants and cafes, a 1,400-person capacity events venue, a chimney lift experience offering 360-degree panoramic views of London’s skyline and new office space which will be home to Apple’s new London campus, as well as 254 new residential apartments.
The Greater London Authority borrowed £1 billion for the project, which will be funded through business rates from the local area and about £270 million from developers.
Construction on the 3.2-kilometre twin railway tunnel between Kennington and Battersea began in 2015.
There will initially be a peak-time service of six trains per hour, falling to five per hour during off-peak periods, although frequency will double by mid-2022.
The opening of the two stations will bring the total number of stops on the underground network to 272.
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In his will he dictated that the bulk of his estate should be used to fund "prizes to those who, during the preceding year, have conferred the greatest benefit to humankind".
Nobel is best known as the inventor of dynamite, but also wrote poetry and drama and could speak Russian, French, English and German by the age of 17. The five original prize categories reflect the interests closest to his heart.
Nobel died in 1896 but it took until 1901, following a legal battle over his will, before the first prizes were awarded.