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London's Underground
Half sheet already mounted 1933 London Underground map, famously designed by Harry Beck.
Beck, an electrical draftsman, revolutionized transit map design by prioritizing readability over geographic accuracy. His "diagram" approach replaced curved, geographically correct lines with a structured grid of 45-degree and 90-degree angles, modeled after electrical circuit diagrams.
Key Design Features

Topographic Distortion: The map abandons physical distances to make the dense city center more legible while fitting distant suburban stations onto the same sheet.
Color-Coded Lines: It introduced a standardized color code for different tube lines, a system still used globally today.
Legible Typography: Beck utilized a clean, sans-serif typeface and ensured all station names were written horizontally for easier reading.
London's Underground (Poster)