This lesson contains 24 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 2 videos.
Items in this lesson
Underground
London
Slide 1 - Slide
Slide 2 - Video
00:07
wat betekent mind the gap?
Slide 3 - Mind map
00:30
how many stations does the london underground have?
Slide 4 - Open question
00:33
Total length of the network is......?
A
204 kilometres
B
402 kilometres
C
42 kilometres
D
420 kilometres
Slide 5 - Quiz
00:36
the video says the underground is a brand. What does that mean?
Slide 6 - Open question
00:52
Why was the underground built?
A
because the city was too big
B
because the roads of the city were overcrowded
C
because the city needed a transport solution
D
because the underground was not very expensive
Slide 7 - Quiz
01:01
When was the first line opened?
A
1863
B
1836
C
1803
D
1873
Slide 8 - Quiz
01:18
what are train fumes?
Slide 9 - Mind map
01:39
how are the two new lines called
Slide 10 - Open question
02:02
Why is the underground called 'tube' by the people of London
Slide 11 - Open question
02:23
why were the trains not popular?
Slide 12 - Mind map
03:06
How much did Beck get for the design of the underground map
A
110 pounds
B
1 pound
C
11 pounds
D
10 pounds
Slide 13 - Quiz
03:09
Find a picture of the underground map on google and post it
Slide 14 - Open question
03:34
what were the tunnels and stations used for in WW2?
Slide 15 - Mind map
04:23
Do you know the name of biggest airport of London?
Slide 16 - Open question
04:35
How old is the tube in this video?
Slide 17 - Open question
Subjects
General information
The Underground during WWII
Abandoned stations
facts
Slide 18 - Slide
General information
The oldest metrosystem
11 lines and 270 stations
The first line
Slide 19 - Slide
The Underground during WWII
Shelter
Aircraft components factory
Secret Cabinet meetings
Slide 20 - Slide
Abandoned stations
Down Street
Aldwych
Slide 21 - Slide
The cheapest way to use the Underground is by Oyster Card. The maximum one-day fare is £7.60
The average speed of a Tube train on the Underground is 33mph
Most of the handles inside the Tube train match the colours of the Tube lines.
The busiest station is Waterloo, with 95.1 million passengers per year.
The total number of escalators is 423. You can't travel without them on the Underground!
Underground? Hmm, not really: only 45 per cent of the Underground is actually in tunnels.
The 11 lines handle approximately 4.8 million passengers a day.
Facts
Because of it's complexity the map is only showing the lines and the stations, not the actual distances. It's a topological map that is only concerned with relative locations of features on the map, not on exact locations