place

All Saints Cathedral, Camden Street

1824 establishments in England19th-century Church of England church buildingsCamden TownCathedrals in LondonChurch buildings converted to a different denomination
Churches completed in 1824Churches in the London Borough of CamdenFormer Church of England church buildingsGrade I listed buildings in the London Borough of CamdenGrade I listed cathedralsGrade I listed churches in LondonGreek Orthodox cathedrals in EnglandReligious organizations established in 1824Use British English from August 2013
GreekOrthodoxCathedral CamdenTown London
GreekOrthodoxCathedral CamdenTown London

All Saints Cathedral, Camden Street, London, originally All Saints Church, Camden Town, St Pancras, Middlesex, is a church in the Camden Town area of London, England. It was built for the Church of England, but it is now a Greek Orthodox church known as the Greek Orthodox Cathedral Church of All Saints. It stands where Camden Street and Pratt Street meet.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article All Saints Cathedral, Camden Street (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

All Saints Cathedral, Camden Street
Pratt Street, London Chalk Farm (London Borough of Camden)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: All Saints Cathedral, Camden StreetContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.538688888889 ° E -0.13797777777778 °
placeShow on map

Address

Greek Orthodox Cathedral Church of All Saints

Pratt Street
NW1 0DL London, Chalk Farm (London Borough of Camden)
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q2942605)
linkOpenStreetMap (460429630)

GreekOrthodoxCathedral CamdenTown London
GreekOrthodoxCathedral CamdenTown London
Share experience

Nearby Places

Camden Road railway station
Camden Road railway station

Camden Road railway station in the London Borough of Camden, north London, is operated by London Overground. It is on the North London line and in Travelcard Zone 2. The first Camden Road station was opened by the North London Railway in 1850 on the east side of what is now St. Pancras Way. It was renamed Camden Town on 1 July 1870, but closed on 5 December the same year when it was replaced by the current station, a short distance to the west.The station is at the corner of Royal College Street and Camden Road. Designed by Edwin Henry Horne, it opened as Camden Town by the North London Railway on 5 December 1870, but was renamed Camden Road on 25 September 1950 to avoid confusion with the London Underground Northern line Camden Town which had opened in 1907. Thus, between 1907 and 1950, there were two stations called Camden Town. It remains Horne's only station still operating as such.The present Camden Town London Underground station is 450 metres to the southwest of this station. It is one of the few railway stations in England in which there is a police station. In addition to the frequent local passenger service, the station is a busy location for freight traffic due to its proximity to the junctions linking the North London line to both the West Coast Main Line at Camden Junction (via the now closed station at Primrose Hill) and the East Coast Main Line at Copenhagen Junction. The former is particularly well used by container trains from the deep water ports at Felixstowe and Tilbury to various terminals in the Midlands and North West of England; it also carried a passenger service (between Watford Junction and Broad Street/Liverpool Street) until 1992.