Not currently on display at the V&A

Map

1934 (designed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Henry Beck's map of the London Underground Railway is the most famous transport map in the world, and an icon of 20th-century London. It shows the London Underground Railway network in a diagrammatic topographical form.

Beck was an unemployed engineer when he first devised the map. His design was inspired by electrical circuit diagrams and uses only vertical, horizontal and diagonal lines. In designing this map, Beck ignored geographical accuracy and chose instead to emphasize the connections and interchanges between the different lines and stations. This resulted in a map which is misleading about the distances between individual stations, but is very clear and easy to use for those undertaking a journey on the system. The map was so successful that it has remained largely unchanged (apart from the addition of new lines and stations) since it was first introduced to the public in 1933 after a successful trial of 500 copies in 1932. The original sketch for the map is also in the collection (E.814-1979).

This map was acquired as part of the Shekou Project, an international partnership between the V&A and China Merchant Shekou Holdings (CMSK) to open a new cultural platform called Design Society in Shekou. It was included in the inaugural exhibition, ‘Values of Design’, in the V&A Gallery at Design Society as an example communication and conveying information in design practice.

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view Mapping the imagination Maps are simplified schematic diagrams that employ a universal visual language through which we codify and comprehend our world. We all use maps in our daily lives as sources of information about places, routes, networks, and boundaries. They offer us the means of describing and understand...

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Brief description
1934 Poster Map of the London Underground
Physical description
A poster map showing the lines of the London Underground, each lines is designated a different colour.
Dimensions
  • Height: 15cm
  • Width: 22.5cm
Gallery label
Pocket Map of Underground Railways of London F.H. Stingemore UK, early 1930s Poster Map of the London Underground Henry 'Harry' C. Beck UK, 1933 Early maps of the London Underground Railway Network were geographically accurate but confusing to read because of the system's twisting routes. Harry Beck's design brought clarity to the complex network by purposefully ignoring geographic correctness in favour of legible geometric lines and labelling. It was so successful that it has remained largely unchanged to this day.
Object history
This map was included in ‘Values of Design’ at the V&A Gallery, Design Society in Shenzhen, China in 2017.
Summary
Henry Beck's map of the London Underground Railway is the most famous transport map in the world, and an icon of 20th-century London. It shows the London Underground Railway network in a diagrammatic topographical form.

Beck was an unemployed engineer when he first devised the map. His design was inspired by electrical circuit diagrams and uses only vertical, horizontal and diagonal lines. In designing this map, Beck ignored geographical accuracy and chose instead to emphasize the connections and interchanges between the different lines and stations. This resulted in a map which is misleading about the distances between individual stations, but is very clear and easy to use for those undertaking a journey on the system. The map was so successful that it has remained largely unchanged (apart from the addition of new lines and stations) since it was first introduced to the public in 1933 after a successful trial of 500 copies in 1932. The original sketch for the map is also in the collection (E.814-1979).

This map was acquired as part of the Shekou Project, an international partnership between the V&A and China Merchant Shekou Holdings (CMSK) to open a new cultural platform called Design Society in Shekou. It was included in the inaugural exhibition, ‘Values of Design’, in the V&A Gallery at Design Society as an example communication and conveying information in design practice.
Collection
Accession number
E.2792-2016

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Record createdJuly 7, 2016
Record URL
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