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Blackwall DLR station

Docklands Light Railway stations in the London Borough of Tower HamletsPoplar, LondonRail transport stations in London fare zone 2Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1994Use British English from August 2012
Blackwall DLR station eastward geograph 3263611 by Ben Brooksbank
Blackwall DLR station eastward geograph 3263611 by Ben Brooksbank

Blackwall is a Docklands Light Railway (DLR) station in Blackwall area of Poplar in London, England. It is located very close to the northern entrance to the Blackwall road tunnel under the River Thames. The station is on the Beckton branch of the DLR between Poplar and East India stations. The DLR station opened, with the Beckton Branch, on 28 March 1994. There was a previous station very close to this site, called Poplar station, which was served by the London and Blackwall Railway from 6 July 1840 to 3 May 1926. Poplar station was along the route of Aspen Way just to the south and east of the DLR station. Blackwall station on the London and Blackwall Railway was actually farther east, on what is today Jamestown Way. A crossover west of the station allows trains from Beckton and Poplar to reverse here.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Blackwall DLR station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Blackwall DLR station
Aspen Way, London Blackwall

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Wikipedia: Blackwall DLR stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.5078 ° E -0.007 °
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Address

Aspen Way

Aspen Way
E14 9QB London, Blackwall
England, United Kingdom
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Blackwall DLR station eastward geograph 3263611 by Ben Brooksbank
Blackwall DLR station eastward geograph 3263611 by Ben Brooksbank
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Nearby Places

Robin Hood Gardens
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Robin Hood Gardens is a residential estate in Poplar, London, designed in the late 1960s by architects Alison and Peter Smithson and completed in 1972. It was built as a council housing estate with homes spread across 'streets in the sky': social housing characterised by broad aerial walkways in long concrete blocks, much like the Park Hill estate in Sheffield; it was informed by, and a reaction against, Le Corbusier's Unité d'Habitation. The estate was built by the Greater London Council, but subsequently the London Borough of Tower Hamlets became the landlord. The scheme, the first major housing scheme built by the Smithsons, consisted of two blocks, one of 10 and one of seven storeys, nurturing between them a large green; it embodied ideas first published in their failed attempt to win the contract to build the Golden Lane Estate in the City of London.A redevelopment scheme, known as Blackwall Reach, involves the demolition of Robin Hood Gardens as part of a wider local regeneration project that was approved in 2012. An attempt supported by a number of notable architects to head off redevelopment by securing listed status for the estate was rejected by the government in 2009. The demolition of the western block began in December 2017. The eastern block, which is still inhabited by tenants, is to be demolished later. The site will contain 1,575 residences.Part of the building has been preserved by the Victoria and Albert Museum and was presented at the Venice Architecture Biennale in 2018.

New Providence Wharf
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Traffic Light Tree
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