List of fictional rapid transit stations


There are many instances in popular culture in which fictional underground stations appear. In many cases for film or television, actual stations are used for the purpose of filming.

Fictional London Underground stations

file:Hayne street Station.jpg|thumb|Hayne Street tube station on the studio tram tour at Walt Disney Studios, Disneyland Resort Paris

Fictional Glasgow Subway stations

Fictional Chicago "L" stations

Fictional Manchester Metrolink stations

Fictional New York City Subway stations

  • Lafayette Street – In Knowing, a major collision occurs between a 6 and a 4 train at Lafayette Street station. The front entrance sign says that Lafayette is served by the 4, 5, 6, J/Z, and M trains, making the real station either Canal Street or Brooklyn Bridge – City Hall. The driver's announcement that Spring Street was the next station makes it possible that it could have been Bleecker Street, which in turn is known as Broadway-Lafayette Street on the IND Sixth Avenue Line, where there is an in-station transfer.
  • Morningside – an upper Manhattan subway stop from the pilot episode of CBS's NYC 22.
  • Roscoe Street – a stop from the opening levels of Max Payne. Served by the 2, 4, and 5 trains, it may be inspired by the 149th Street-Grand Concourse station.
  • Kings Plaza – a subway stop in Brooklyn at the end of the V train. The V train however at no point ever had any exclusive stations, sharing all of its stations with the E, F, or R trains, and not going to Brooklyn, except for a brief unexpected extension to Euclid Avenue in January 2005 after a signal room fire at Chambers Street.
For the filming of Morbius (2022), an NYC-Subway styled station signage with its name "Front Street" served by the 2, 3, A, and C trains, similar to the Chambers Street/Park Place station complex or Fulton Street, was placed in the disused Jubilee line section at Charing Cross station on the London Underground. Similar signs were placed on buildings in the Northern Quarter of Manchester. The film also incorrectly depicts the New York Subway running on a fourth rail the way the London Underground does.

Fictional Washington, D.C. Metro stations

Stations in Fictional countries