T-Centralen
The only point in Stockholm's metro where all three lines cross — 340,000 people pass through daily.
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Built up in stages between 1957 and 1977, T-Centralen grew from a single Green Line stop into the hub that stitched Stockholm's whole metro network together. The Blue Line arrived in 1975, the commuter rail slid in below in 2017, and the tram terminus followed in 2018. No other station in the system holds all three metro lines at once.
What to look for
- The long moving walkway on the mezzanine level that bridges the two separate platform sets
- Signage for the Green, Red, and Blue lines converging under one roof — unique in the Stockholm system
- The pedestrian underpass running beneath Vasagatan to Stockholm Central Station
A pedestrian underpass under Vasagatan connects directly to Stockholm Central Station; Cityterminalen long-distance bus terminal is also linked from here.
T-Centralen is one of 34 sights worth the detour in Stockholm, all bundled offline in Voyage GO — download the Stockholm pack and it sits on your map with no signal, filling your travel passport the moment you walk past.
More to see in Stockholm
- Royal Swedish Academy of SciencesThis is the body that picks up the phone to tell physicists and chemists they've won the Nobel Prize.
- Avicii ArenaA 110-metre sphere that serves as the Sun in the world's largest scale model of the solar system — and you can walk right up to it.
- Skogskyrkogården (The Woodland Cemetery)A 1920 cemetery built on old pine-covered gravel quarries that went on to reshape how the world designs burial grounds.
- Stockholm PalaceThe same ground has held a royal residence since the 1250s — the current palace took nearly six decades to finish, outlived its architect, and the Rococo interiors are largely unchanged.
- Vasa MuseumA 64-gun warship that sank on its maiden voyage in 1628 — and is still almost entirely intact.
- Skansen150 actual Swedish buildings, shipped piece by piece to one hill — a whole country preserved before industry erased it.