Trains and buses will fall silent tomorrow as London marks the tenth anniversary of the 7/7 bombings.

The one-minute silence will take place at 11.30am across Transport for London services to commemorate the 52 people who were killed in the terror attacks, and the hundreds who were injured.

Wreaths will be laid in the morning at the 7/7 memorial in Hyde Park and other locations, including King’s Cross St Pancras station and Tavistock Square.

Survivors, friends and relatives of victims, and members of the emergency services will also attend a national service of remembrance at St Paul’s Cathedral at 11am.

They will be joined by Prince Andrew and Mayor of London Boris Johnson.

A further service for survivors and relatives of the victims will be held at the memorial site in the afternoon.

The 2005 attack saw bombs exploded on the Tube between Liverpool Street and Aldgate, at Edgware Road, between King’s Cross and Russell Square, and on a Number 30 bus by Tavistock Square.

The four suicide bombers were later identified as Mohammad Sidique Khan, Shehzad Tanweer, Germaine Lindsay, and Hasib Hussain, who had travelled from Luton to King's Cross on the morning of the attacks.