TfL has launched an investigation after the doors of a Victoria line train apparently opened while it was travelling between stations.
And the rest of the day's news, including an odd fib from the Evening Standard.
Ever wondered what Tube blogger Annie Mole sounds like? N Quentin Woolf interviews her in her natural habitat - the London Underground.
Photographer Julian Gajewski sent us this picture of a forlorn-looking Metropolitan line train being taken away by truck at the end of its working life.
Boris Johnson has again invoked the prospect of driverless Tube trains as a way of permanently beating the strikes.
Despite manifesto promises of a no strike deal, there have been more tube strikes under two and a half years of Boris than eight years of Ken.
An utterly gorgeous hand-drawn map of the area between Earl's Court and Wimbledon, along the District Line.
The management at tube union Aslef have described the chances of a strike on the day of the Royal Wedding as "remote".
New Poems on the Underground are themed around the value of the written word.
Fares and charges increase for many London commuters as the capital returns to work.
Renew your Travelcard before Sunday to beat the New Year fare increases.
The RMT, those loveable rogues partly responsible for many of London's Tube strikes, are offering special Christmas cards on their website. The perfect gift, perhaps?
For the second time during the industrial action of recent months, passengers were mistakenly let off at Canada Water station during November's Tube strike.
The runaway engineering train that careened along the Northern line in the early hours of August 13th this year was the result of faulty equipment and basic human error, an internal report by TfL has concluded.
A deal could be signed within weeks that would bring mobile phone coverage to parts of the Tube network before the Olympic Games.
The latest 24-hour Tube strike by members of the RMT and TSSA unions is underway, meaning that services will be disrupted across most London Underground lines until Tuesday morning.
The Evening Standard has come into possession of a report that claims there will be disruption on the Underground every weekend until the Olympics.
Everything's not always as it seems with your fellow passengers.
Londonist
Something wrong with this article? Let us know here.