'Down Street', also known as 'Down Street (Mayfair)', was a station of the
London Underground's
Piccadilly Line which closed in
1932. During
World War II it was used as an air-raid shelter, notably by
Winston Churchill and his
War Cabinet. It is now disused.
Down Street station lies between
Green Park and
Hyde Park Corner on the Piccadilly Line. Evidence of its presence can still be identified through the train windows between these stations by a change in the tunnel surface from black to a section of beige brickwork. It came into service on
15 March 1907, a few months after the rest of the line. The surface building was on Down Street, just off
Piccadilly in
Mayfair. It was never a busy station, as the surrounding area was largely residential and its residents were too wealthy to be regular tube passengers. The neighbouring stations were also fairly close by.

Down Street station on 1912 map
Like
Brompton Road, Down Street was often skipped by trains. In
1929 it was one of the stations mooted for closure in connection with the extension of the Piccadilly Line: the elimination of less-busy stations in the central area would improve both reliability and journey times for long-distance commuters. Additionally, the neighbouring stations were being rebuilt with
escalators in place of
lifts, and their new entrances were nearer to Down Street, further squeezing its small
catchment area. The station closed on
May 21,
1932.

How Down Street might have appeared on the London Underground Map today if it remained open
After the station was closed it was immediately modified, with part of one platform tunnel becoming a junction providing access to a new
siding between Down Street and Hyde Park Corner. In
1939 the
platform faces were bricked up and the resulting space used as an underground
bunker. The main wartime occupants of the station were the Emergency Railway Committee, but it was also used by Churchill and the war cabinet until the
Cabinet War Rooms were ready for use. Since the end of the war the station has only been used as an emergency access point to the tube. The surface building is still standing.
In popular culture
Film & TV appearances
Part of the 2004 British horror film ''
Creep'' was set in the Down Street tube station, although the scenes were actually shot at the disused
Aldwych tube station and on studio sets.
A sequence in the
James Bond film ''
Die Another Day'' is set in an 'abandoned' Tube station called
Vauxhall Cross. The station is supposedly used as a neutral ground for
MI6 illegals (officially nonexistent agents) to be given missions by
M. A visible track-side line diagram places the station north/east of
Hyde Park Corner, which suggests that it is actually Down Street, but for the fact that the real station is some 2.6 km (1.6 miles) away from the real Vauxhall Cross, and trains still run through Down Street.
The TV series and novel ''
Neverwhere'' are mostly set in a medieval-fantasy world with locations named after tube stations such as
Blackfriars and
Knightsbridge; the finale is located in an area known as Down Street, and one scene of the TV series was filmed on the remaining open section of platform at Down Street, with real trains passing by in the background.
Music
The British band
Hefner released a song titled ''Down Street'', on their 2006 album
Catfight, accoridng to the sleeve notes of which, it is set in the early 1930s and tells the story of two lovers who meet at the station.
Steve Hackett also recorded a song titled ''Down Street'', on his 2006 album
Wild Orchids, about the station in its disused state.
[1]
References
★ J. E. Connor, ''London's Disused Underground Stations'', Capital Transport, 2001, pp. 28-33.
External links
★
Down Street on Hywel Williams's Underground History site.
★
Subterranea Britannica: Down Street Station
★
Pictures from a tour of Down Street.
★
More pictures plus
video from the same tour.
★ Down Street station shortly after opening
★
The London Underground in Films & Television