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Greenwich foot tunnel

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Inside the tunnel
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Inside the tunnel

The tunnel, showing the north elevators
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The tunnel, showing the north elevators

Greenwich side entrance, with a similar Tower Hamlets side entrance visible in the distance to the right
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Greenwich side entrance, with a similar Tower Hamlets side entrance visible in the distance to the right

Glazed cupola above southern entrance to the Greenwich foot tunnel, with the figurehead of the Cutty Sark in the foreground.
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Glazed cupola above southern entrance to the Greenwich foot tunnel, with the figurehead of the Cutty Sark in the foreground.

Reflections of the Southern Entrance to the Greenwich foot tunnel caught in the rain.
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Reflections of the Southern Entrance to the Greenwich foot tunnel caught in the rain.

The Greenwich foot tunnel is a pedestrian tunnel crossing beneath the River Thames in east London, linking the London Borough of Greenwich to the south with the London Borough of Tower Hamlets to the north. It was designed by civil engineer Sir Alexander Binnie for London County Council, and was constructed by contractor John Cochrane & Co; the project started in June 1899 and the tunnel was opened on 4 August 1902.

The tunnel replaced an expensive and sometimes unreliable ferry service, and was intended to allow workers living on the south side of the Thames to reach their workplaces in the London docks and shipyards then situated on the Isle of Dogs (its creation owed much to the efforts of working-class politician Will Crooks who had worked in the docks and, after chairing the LCC's Bridges Committee responsible for the tunnel, would later serve as Labour MP for nearby Woolwich).

The entrance shafts at both ends lie beneath glazed cupolas, with lifts (installed in 1904, upgraded in 1992) and spiral staircases allowing pedestrians to reach the sloping, tile-lined tunnel at the bottom. The cast-iron tunnel itself is 1,217 feet (370 m) long and has an internal diameter of about 9 feet (3 m). Its cast-iron rings are lined with concrete which has been surfaced with some 200,000 white glazed tiles. The northern end was damaged by bombs during World War II and the repairs include a thick steel and concrete inner lining that reduces the diameter substantially for a short distance.

The tunnel is a convenient link between Greenwich town centre — the entrance is close to the preserved tea clipper Cutty Sark — and Island Gardens, a park with excellent views across the river to the former Greenwich Hospital, the Queen's House and the Royal Greenwich Observatory.

The tunnel is classed as a public highway and therefore by law is kept open 24 hours a day. However the lift service is only operated during periods of high demand. It is also part of the UK's National Cycle Network, Route 1, linking Inverness and Dover —which is ironic as cyclists are not allowed to ride through the tunnel.

West: Crossings of the River Thames East:
Jubilee Line tunnel
between Canary Wharf
and Canada Water
Greenwich foot tunnel DLR tunnel
between Island Gardens
and Cutty Sark

 


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