• The Greenwich Foot Tunnel crosses beneath the River Thames in East London, linking Greenwich (Royal Borough of Greenwich) on the south bank with Millwall...
  • Opened in 1902, the Greenwich Foot Tunnel must be one of the oldest underwater tunnels around!
  • The Greenwich Foot Tunnel is 1,217 feet in length and about 50 feet deep.
  • The Greenwich Foot Tunnel runs beneath the river Thames between Island Gardens, on the Isle of Dogs, and Greenwich, with an entrance next to the Cutty Sark.
  • It only takes around 5 minutes to walk through the Greenwich Foot Tunnel, but it’s the experience of seeing Victorian engineering up close that makes it so...
  • The Greenwich foot tunnel lifts are listed structures that need specialist parts to work.
  • The booklet is an extract of the proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, and was published in 1902, the year the Greenwich foot tunnel opened.
  • Approximately 1.5 million people use the Greenwich & Woolwich Foot Tunnels to get from one side of the mighty River Thames to the other.
  • Opened in 1902, the Greenwich Foot Tunnel cuts 50 feet deep below the surface to take pedestrians under the River Thames from Greenwich to the Isle of Dogs.
  • The Greenwich Foot Tunnel connects Greenwich to the Isle of Dogs with an underground walking trail that spans 370 meters in length and is rumored...
  • In 1902 the Greenwich Foot Tunnel was constructed by the London County Council (LCC) and the ferry was no longer required.
  • Stretching beneath The Thames, this subterranean foot tunnel links Greenwich on the south bank with Isle of Dogs on the north.
  • Greenwich Foot Tunnel is a tunnel under the river Thames, which links Greenwich with Millwall.