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A Rebrand for London’s ‘Spaghetti of Orange’ Overground Train System

London’s public transportation system may soon become a bit easier to navigate.

The train lines on London’s Overground, a rail system that largely serves people in neighborhoods outside of central London beyond the reach of the city’s Underground system, will be renamed.

The lines on the map will also receive new colors, replacing a system that is currently marked entirely with orange lines on maps.

While the Overground is technically a different system than the Underground, popularly known as the tube, the same payment method applies to both, and multiple stations connect the two systems.

The new names are: Lioness, named after the English women’s soccer team; Mildmay, honoring a small East London hospital with a pivotal role caring for patients during the AIDS crisis; Windrush, after the ship that brought some of the first migrants from the Caribbean to Britain; Weaver, which travels through an area once known for its textile trade; Suffragette, after the movement that fought for women’s right to vote; and Liberty, which references the historical independence of the people of the Havering borough.

The new names and maps will go into effect later this year. The project will cost about 6.3 million pounds (roughly $7.9 million), according to Transport for London, the city’s transportation authority.

The new, slightly more colorful, Transport for London map, including the six new London Overground lines.Credit…Transport for London

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