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Places of interest in N1
City Road on the London Underground is a disused tube station. It was one of the stations built when the City & South London Railway (C&SLR) (now part of the Northern Line) opened its extension from Moorgate to Angel on 17 November 1901. It is located between Old Street and Angel.
The Victoria Miro Gallery is a leading[1] British contemporary art gallery in London, with an international reputation,[2] run by Victoria Miro, one of the "grandes dames of the Britart scene", who first exhibited Chris Ofili and the Chapman Brothers.[3] She opened her first gallery in 1985 in Cork Street, where she became one of the principal dealers,[4] then moved to much larger premises adjacent to Hoxton in 2000.[3] Her sale of Ofili's work, The Upper Room, to the Tate gallery in 2005 caused a media furore,[5] as Ofili was a serving trustee of the Tate, which was censured by the Charity Commission.[6] The gallery represents Turner Prize winners, Ofili and Grayson Perry.[7]
The station was, from the early 1960s, closed on Sundays. In the 1970s it was also closed on Saturdays.
The National Rail station now called Alexandra Palace was formerly called Wood Green; it was renamed in 1984.
Noel Park and Wood Green is a closed railway station on the Palace Gates Line in Wood Green, north London. It was located on the north-east side of The Broadway adjacent to Pelham Road. Its site is now occupied by Wood Green Shopping City.
Information by Wikipedia.com
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