The station building has recently been cleaned up,
revealing the original station name lettering beneath (I bet
it mystifies a few passers-by not 'in the know'). This photo
pre-dates the clean-up. The Victor Printing Company had occupied
the top half of the building from before the station had been
closed.

The entrance in 2007 showing the original station name lettering.
Photo: Philip Lindhurst. ©
2007
The rear of the station building.

The lift shaft at surface level.

Original toilet cubicles still in situ in 2007.
Photo: Philip Lindhurst. ©
2007

The top of the emergency stairs.

The entrance to the lift shaft at platform level (right hand
side of the photo). In design, the station is nearly identical
to that of Caledonian Road (i.e. the lifts descended straight
down to platform level).
The northbound platform looking south

Caledonian Road station (the next one northwards) showing its
almost identical design to the York Road platform above.
As a station it is unremarkable, as one supposes York Road must
have been in its open days. It is only its abandonment that causes
York Road to be of interest.

Platform area in 2007.
Photo: Philip Lindhurst. ©
2007

Northbound platform area looking south. The steps show the level
of where the platform used to be.

Hiding behind a door: some of the original tiling not painted
over.

Bricked off part of the Northbound platform.

Southbound platform.

The disused cross-over tunnel just north of York Road station,
decommissioned when a new cross-over tunnel was opened at Kings
Cross in the 1930s.
The terrorist bomb that was detonated in 2005 near
the cross-over junction just south of Kings Cross station, highlighted
the vulnerability of the Piccadilly Line to major closure when
that particular cross-over junction is compromised (the entire
section of line between Arnos Grove and Hyde Park Corner was
closed). Only a few weeks prior to the bomb, a suicide at Kings
X caused the same length of the line to be closed for the best
part of the late morning and early afternoon, and other similar
instances are not infrequent.
Perhaps LUL should consider reconstituting the York
Road cross-over as a means of providing some resilience to the
line. The necessary tunnelling is already in place after all...
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