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An official Tube map produced in 2004, which shows a predicted view of how the London Underground would change by 2016, has surfaced online.

The map, which was created by TfL over ten years ago to highlight proposed changes for the network, shows a number of new lines which were never brought to fruition by the transport body.

This includes the East London Transit - a line that would connect Gants Hill to Dagenham Dock and Romford - and a Greenwich Waterfront train that would theoretically connect Greenwich with Woolwich Arsenal and Gallions Reach.

Also included in the proposed changes was an extension of the Metropolitan line to connect Croxley with Watford Junction.

There were also plans to build a new line, the West London Transit, between Uxbridge, Ealing and Shepherd’s Bush.

TfL says that the reason why today’s map does not match this original 2004 blueprint is because the plans were changed when Boris Johnson began his tenure as Mayor of London.

A spokesperson for TfL told the Evening Standard: “This predicted map was updated following the publication of the new TfL Business Plan in 2008, when there was a change in Mayor, to show the network as predicted in 2018.”

The 2004 map also shares details of the new Crossrail line, which is scheduled to open in London in 2018.

View the full map here

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