Quizzes & Puzzles8 mins ago
Heathrow T 4 To Blackfriars Rail Station For Brighton
Meeting niece from OZ. The way I came had alot of changes after blackfriars. Quickest easies way please
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you want to go solely by tube as far as possible take the Piccadilly Line to Barons Court and change there for a District Line to Blackfriars. It's 23 stops on the tube and will take you getting on for an hour, but it involves just one simple cross-platform change at Barons Court. You can make that change at Hammersmith or Earl's Court if you wish, but Barons Court will be much less crowded.
Mushroom's route is probably quicker but the changes at Paddington, and particularly at Farringdon are a bit "messy".
Unless there is a specific reason for travelling via Blackfriars you could cut your tube journey down (by five stops) by travelling to Brighton from Victoria.
Mushroom's route is probably quicker but the changes at Paddington, and particularly at Farringdon are a bit "messy".
Unless there is a specific reason for travelling via Blackfriars you could cut your tube journey down (by five stops) by travelling to Brighton from Victoria.
I'm also confused as to why you should want to go via Blackfriars!
The Piccadilly Line takes you directly to Kings Cross/St Pancras. There are 4 trains an hour running directly from St Pancras to Brighton.
Alternatively, the 'official' route (as found by the National Rail journey planner and suggested by Mushroom25) is to take the Elizabeth Line to Paddington, change to another Elizabeth Line service to Farringdon and then get a train to Brighton from there.
The journey time's not much different if you take the Heathrow Express across to Terminals 2 and 3 (which you can use free of charge) and then a direct National Express bus to Brighton.
The Piccadilly Line takes you directly to Kings Cross/St Pancras. There are 4 trains an hour running directly from St Pancras to Brighton.
Alternatively, the 'official' route (as found by the National Rail journey planner and suggested by Mushroom25) is to take the Elizabeth Line to Paddington, change to another Elizabeth Line service to Farringdon and then get a train to Brighton from there.
The journey time's not much different if you take the Heathrow Express across to Terminals 2 and 3 (which you can use free of charge) and then a direct National Express bus to Brighton.
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