The London Eurostar terminal is at St Pancras International station which is adjacent to Kings Cross station, so whatever it takes to cross the road and buy your ticket.
Eurostar
Eurostar IS an international rail service and nothing to do with LU although announcements at Euston/Kings Cross underground station may well mention Eurostar.
Kings Cross Station
Take the Piccadilly line from Heathrow to King's Cross St Pancras (St Pancras is the Eurostar station).
Eurostar is the brand name of the company running high speed trains London-Paris and London-Lille-Brussels through the Channel Tunnel.Eurostar uses the stations: St. Pancras (London), Gare du Nord (Paris), Bruxelles Midi (Brussels) and Lille Europe.To get from London to Switzerland you need to go:- London St. Pancras - Paris Gare du Nord (Eurostar train).- Cross Paris by Métro.- Paris Gare du Lyon via Basel or Geneva to your final destination.I have done this, it takes about 7-8 hours From London to Basel or Geneva, longer to your final destination.See "The Man in Seat Sixty-One" website for more info.
No. You will have to go to Paddington to catch a train to Oxford.
You can either travel from London Victroia with a Southern service or from London Charing Cross with a Southeasten service. Going from London Charing Cross is a better option as the journey is usually around 20 minutes faster.
Eurostar is the brand name of the company running high speed trains London-Paris and London-Lille-Brussels through the Channel Tunnel.Eurostar uses the stations: St. Pancras (London), Gare du Nord (Paris), Bruxelles Midi (Brussels) and Lille Europe.To get from London to Zürich you need to go:- London St. Pancras - Paris Gare du Nord (Eurostar train).- Cross Paris by Métro.- Paris Gare du Lyon to Zürich Hauptbahnhof (TGV train).I have done this, it takes about 8 hours.
Kings Cross and Charing Cross.
The largest and busiest are in London. There are many London Terminals: Waterloo (for South of England) Victoria (for Sussex) Charing Cross and London Bridge (for Kent) Liverpool Street (for East Anglia) Euston (for the West Coast and most major cities) King's Cross (for Scotland and the East Coast) Paddington (for the Southwest of England and West Midlands) Marylebone (for High Wycombe) Fenchurch Street (for Southend) St Pancras (for the Eurostar and East Midlands) Other large maor stations include Glasgow Central, Birmingham New Street, Manchester Piccadilly, Leeds, Liverpool Lime Street, Edinburgh Waverley, Cardiff Central, Glasgow Queen Street, Reading and Sheffield.
The River Thames in London.
A train company that use TGV-TMSTs or BR Class 373s to cross the Channel between Paris Gare Du Nord and London St Pancras (formerly used to terminate at Waterloo International)