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of London", "Ghost Tour", Parliment, Bukingham, Royal,
River Thames in South-East England, "Greater London", Central,
West End - theatres and shops, Chinatown, "Covent Garden"
- designer and alternative shopping, "Royal Opera House",
"Leicester Square - mainstream entertainment hubs. cinemas. Oxford
Street - high-street shopping, Soho - nightclubs and restaurants,
the heart London, Trafalgar Square" - churches, galleries and
monuments, "Bloomsbury", academic and intellectual, University
of London's constituent colleges, Clerkenwell, "City of London",
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government", "royal family", Diana, "Paddington
Station", includes Bayswater and Queensway, Chelsea, Kensington,
Acton, Chiswick, Ealing, Fulham, Hammersmith and "Shepherd's
Bush", Finchley, Hampstead, Hampstead garden suburb, Maida Vale
and St John's Wood, Kilburn and Wembley. Archway, Camden, "Crouch
End", Islington and Wood Green. galleries and bustling nightlife,
"London 2012 Olympic Games". Bethnal Green, Bow, Brick Lane,
Clerkenwell, Docklands, Hackney, Mile End, Poplar, Shoreditch, Stepney,
Stratford, Walthamstow and Whitechapel, Battersea, Brixton, Clapham,
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and Wandsworth, Greenwich, Bromley, Croydon, Deptford, Dulwich, Lewisham
and Penge. "London Eye", Wimbleton, tennis, "Hyde Park"
Showing, St Mary Axe 'the Gherkin' distinctive skyscraper, NatWest
Tower. Big Ben or the London Eye. Abney Park Cemetery 'the poor man's
Highgate', Admiralty Arch, Trafalgar Square, Edwardian monument, a
triple-arched stone entrance , Aston Webb, Buckingham Palace, royal
processions and state visits,Albert Memorial, Queen Victoria's German
husband Albert Alexandra Park & Palace, Crystal Palace, Alexandra
Palace 'Ally Pally', multipurpose conference and exhibition centre,
indoor ice-skating rink, Phoenix Bar & Beer Garden. All Souls
ChurchA Nash, Regent St, delightful church, circular columned porch,
needlelike spire, Greek temple, churches in central London. All-Hallows-by-the-Tower
All Hallow, Samuel Pepys, Great Fire of London, WWII. copper spire
a Wren church in Cannon St, master woodcarver Grinling Gibbons, Apsley
House (Wellington Museum), 'No 1, London'. Robert Adam for Baron Apsley,
Duke of Wellington, Wellington Museum. Apsley House (Wellington Museum)
Arsenal Emirates Stadium, Bank of England Museum, Soane's original
stock office, Bankside Gallery, Bankside Gallery, Royal Watercolour
Society, Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers. watercolours, prints
and engravings. Artists' Perspectives, Banqueting House, Tudor Whitehall
Palace, Renaissance building, Inigo Jones, Barbican, Barbican, London's,
three cinemas, two theatres which feature touring drama, Barbican
Gallery, Battersea Park, Henry Moore sculptures and Peace Pagoda,
Hiroshima Day, King Charles I, Duke of Wellington, Battersea Power
Station, Pink Floyd's, four smokestacks, Giles Gilbert Scott, BBC
Television Centre, TV production, BBC's TV, TVC, BBC staff, BFI South
Bank, British Film Institute. NFT, Mediatheque, BFI archive, well-stocked
film and bookshop, stand-up piano. Borough Market 'London's Larder',
food-lovers, tourist destination. Bramah Museum of Tea & Coffee,
Holland and England, China; nearby Butler's Wharf, Brick Lane, Brick
Lane, Bengali community, Banglatown, curry and balti houses intermingled
with sari and fabric shops, Indian cookery stores, streetwear boutiques.
Brit Oval, Surrey County Cricket Club, the Brit Oval is London's second
cricketing venue after Lord's. Surrey matches, international test
matches. cricket-lover John Major, Britain at War Experience, Tooley
St railway arch, the Britain at War Experience, WWII had on daily
life, nostalgia of the war generation, mock Anderson air-raid shelter,
simulated sounds of warning sirens and bombers flying overhead, British
Library, British Library, King's Cross and Euston Stations, Colin
St John Wilson's, straight lines of red brick,Prince Charles 'secret-police
building', British Museum, world's oldest and finest museums, royal
physician Hans Sloane's 'cabinet of curiosities', seven million items,
Broadcasting House, Broadcasting House, BBC began radio broadcasting,
BBC's radio output, BBC programmes, Shepherd's Bush, Brompton Cemetery,
London's vast population, Fulham Rd and Old Brompton Rd. St Peter's
in Rome. Emmeline Pankhurst, Beatrix Potter's characters. Brompton
Oratory, London Oratory and the Oratory of St Philip Neri, Roman Catholic
church, Italian baroque style, marble, candles and statues, Tony Blair,
Buckingham Palace, Buckingham House, royal family's London lodgings,
St James's Palace, Queen Victoria Memorial, Green Park. Buddhapadipa
Temple, Wimbledon Village, Thai temple Bangkok. Buddhists in Britain,
The wat (temple compound), bot (consecrated chapel) Burgh House, Queen
Anne, Hampstead Museum of local history, Buttery Garden Café,
Cabinet War Rooms & Churchill Museum, Prime Minister Winston Churchill,
cabinet and generals, WWII, 'the greatest Briton'.deprivation and
duty. 'We will fight them on the beaches', Churchill Museum. Camden
Market, Camden Lock, Grand Union Canal, Camden Town tube station to
Chalk Farm tube station, tourist-oriented, Canary Wharf Tower, Cenotaph,
The Cenotaph (Greek for 'empty tomb'), British and Commonwealth victims,
two world wars. Central Criminal Court (Old Bailey), Old Bailey leaves
watching a TV courtroom drama for dust. 'The Old Bailey', crime and
notoriety. Kray twins and Oscar Wilde, Changing of the Guard, 'must
see', The old guard (Foot Guards of the Household Regiment), Buckingham
Palace, bright red uniforms and bearskin hats, marching soldiers,
Charterhouse, Carthusian monastery, whose centrepiece is a Tudor hall
with a restored hammer-beam roof. Great Chamber, where Queen Elizabeth
I stayed on numerous occasions. Chelsea Football Club, London's richest
football club, Chelsea, Chelsea Old Church, monument to Thomas More,
the former chancellor (and now Roman Catholic saint), lost his head,
Henry VIII's, Church of England. Chelsea Physic Garden, Apothecaries'
Society, medicinal plants and healing. rare trees, shrubs and plants,
Chiswick House, Palladian pavilion with an octagonal dome and colonnaded
portico. Earl of Burlington, tour of Italy, Roman. Lord Burlington
library and art collection. Churchill Museum & Cabinet War Rooms,
Prime Minister Winston Churchill, WWII, 'the greatest Briton'. Cabinet
War Rooms, City Hall, Glass-clad City Hall, Sir Norman Foster and
Ken Shuttleworth, 'London Photomat', Clapham Common, Clapham neighbourhood.
Graham Greene,The End of the Affair and Ian McEwan, outdoor summer
events. Clarence House, Prince Charles, Clarence House Clink Prison
Museum, detain debtors, whores, thieves and even actors, 'in the clink'
(in jail). County Hall, County Hall, art museum and gallery, the vast
London aquarium and two hotels. Cutty Sark, Greenwich landmark, great
clipper ships to sail between China and England. Dennis Severs' House,
American eccentric who restored and turned it into what he called
a 'still-life drama'. 'family' of Huguenot silk weavers, Spitalfields.
Design Museum, Sir Terence Conran, Manolo Blahnik shoes; Formula One
racing cars, Velcro - and Dickens House Museum, The great Victorian
novelist, trail of blue plaques. four-storey house, Kent. Docklands,
Docklands. Sir Norman Foster's sleek Canary Wharf Underground station,
Cesar Dr Johnson's House, Georgian city mansion. Gough Sq, Samuel
Johnson, 'When a man is tired of London, he is tired of life'. Dulwich
Picture Gallery, public art gallery, the Dulwich Picture Gallery,
Sir John Soane, Dulwich College' , paintings by Raphael, Rembrandt,
Rubens, Reynolds, Gainsborough, Poussin, Lely, Van Dyck and others.
Eltham Palace, Art Deco, Eltham Palace, Courtauld House on its grounds.
Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art, Italian art, futurist painting,
Georgian house, Giacomo Balla, Umberto Boccioni, Gino Severini and
Ardengo Soffici. classic Italian film posters. Fan Museum, museum
entirely devoted to fans, ivory, tortoiseshell, peacock-feather and
folded-fabric examples alongside kitsch battery-powered versions and
huge ornamental Welsh fans. Fenton House, Hampstead, merchant's residence,
walled garden with roses and an orchard, porcelain and keyboard instruments
- harpsichord played by Handel - needlework pictures and original
Georgian furniture. Firepower, The Royal Artillery Museum, artillery
has developed through the ages, The History Gallery traces, catapults
to nuclear warheads, artillery gunners from WWI to Bosnia, Florence
Nightingale Museum, St Thomas's Hospital, Florence Nightingale nurses
to Turkey in 1854 during the Crimean War. improve conditions for the
soldiers, set up a training school for nurses at St Thomas's, Fulham
Palace, bishops of London, architectural styles set in beautiful gardens,
longest moat in England. Tudor gateway, Fuller's Griffin Brewery,
bitter, comprehensive tasting session, last working brewery in London.
Geffrye Museum, Shoreditch's ivy-clad series of almshouses with a
herb garden, domestic interiors, Elizabethan times right through to
the end of the 19th century. Golden Hinde, Sir Francis Drake's famous
Tudor ship, five-deck galleon, Drake, circumnavigate the globe. Great
Fire Memorial, corpulent boy, 'In memory put up for the fire of London
occasioned by the sin of gluttony 1666'. busy bakery. Great Mosque,
Brick Lane. New French Church for the Huguenots, Methodist chapel,
Great Synagogue for Jewish refugees from Russia and central Europe,
Great Mosque, Green Park, St James's, this park has trees and open
space, sunshine and shade, though no flower beds - duelling ground,
vegetable garden, fireworks were held in the Green Park to celebrate
peace; Handel, music that accompanied them. Greenwich Foot Tunnel,
crossing beneath the River Thames. Greenwich Park, London's largest
and loveliest parks, with a grand avenue, wide-open spaces, a rose
garden and impressive views across the River Thames to the Docklands
from atop the hill. Le Nôtre, who landscaped the palace gardens
of Versailles for Louis XIV. It contains several historic sights,
a teahouse, a café and the Wilderness - a deer park in the
southeast corner, Guards Museum, Change of Guards, guards in formation
outside the museum for their march up to Buckingham Palace. five regiments
of foot guards and their role in military campaigns from Waterloo,
Charles II Guildhall, Square Mile, the Guildhall, secular stone structure
to have survived the Great Fire of 1666, severely damaged both then
and during the Blitz of 1940.Guildhall Art Gallery, gallery of the
City of London, great collection of paintings of London, darkened
basement, where the archaeological remains of Roman London's amphitheatre,
or coliseum, lie. Ham House, 'Hampton Court in miniature', Ham House,
Earl of Dysart, 'whipping boy' to Charles I, Hampstead Heath, Sprawling
Hampstead Heath, rolling woodlands and meadows, four - from the city
of London. woods, hills and meadows, Parliament Hill, Hampton Court
Palace, history is palpable, from the kitchens and grand living quarters
of Henry VIII to the spectacular gardens complete with a 300-year-old
maze. British history. Handel House Museum, George Frederick Handel,
German-born composer was in residence, complete with artworks borrowed
from several museums. Highgate Cemetery, Most famous as the final
resting place of Karl Marx and other notable mortals, Highgate Cemetery,
Victorian graves, grave of Marx. Herbert Spencer - Marx and Spencer,
Highgate Wood, With more than 28 hectares of ancient woodland, this
park is a wonderful spot for a walk any time of the year. It also
has a huge clearing in the centre for sports, a popular playground
and nature trail for kids and a range of activities - from falconry
to bat-watching - throughout the year. HMS Belfast, Moored in the
Thames opposite the newly laid-out Potters Fields Park, HMS Belfast
large, light cruiser, Belfast shipyard Harland & Wolff, it served
in WWII, most noticeably in the Normandy landings, and during the
Korean War. Hogarth's House, artist and social commentator William
Hogarth, caricatures and engravings, including such famous works as
the haunting Gin Lane , Marriage à la Mode and a copy of A
Rake's Progress . Holborn Viaduct, This fine iron bridge was built
in 1869 in an effort to smarten up the area, link Holborn and Newgate
St, four bronze statues represent Commerce and Agriculture, Science
and Fine Arts, Horniman Museum, collection of wealthy pack rat tea
merchant Frederick John Horniman, who had the Art Nouveau building
with clock tower and mosaics specially designed, dusty stuffed walrus
and voodoo altars from Haiti and Benin to a mock-up of a Fijian reef
and a wonderful collection of concertinas. Horse Guards Parade, Buckingham
Palace's Changing of the Guard, Household Cavalry royal palaces (opposite
the Banqueting House). Queen's official birthday, the Trooping of
the Colour, House Mill, trio of mills that once stood on this small
island in the River Lea, the House Mill, sluice tidal mill, grinding
grain for a nearby distillery, East End industry. Houses of Parliament,
The House of Commons and House of Lords are housed here in the sumptuous
Palace of Westminster. Charles Barry, assisted by interior designer
Augustus Pugin, neo-Gothic style was all the rage. The most famous
feature outside the palace is the Clock Tower, commonly known as Big
Ben. Hunterian Museum, pioneering surgeon John Hunter, slightly morbid,
little-known, yet fantastic London museum. Among the more bizarre
items on display are the skeleton of a giant, half of mathematician
Charles Babbage's brain, and, Winston Churchill's dentures. Hyde Park,
London's legendary park spreads itself over a whopping, manicured
gardens and wild, deserted expanses of overgrown grass. Spring prompts
the gorgeous Rose Gardens into vivacious bloom, and summers are full
of sunbathers, picnickers, Frisbee-throwers and general London populace
who drape themselves across the green. Imperial War Museum,15-inch
naval guns outside the front entrance to what was once Bethlehem Royal
Hospital, Bedlam, sombre, thoughtful museum. Most of its exhibits
are given over to exploring the human and social cost of conflict.
Inner Temple, Duck under the archway next to Prince Henry's Room and
you'll find yourself in the Inner Temple, a sprawling complex of some
of the finest buildings on the river. The church was originally planned
and built by the secretive Knights Templar. At the weekend you'll
usually have to enter from the Victoria Embankment. Institute of Contemporary
Arts, the ICA is as untraditional as it gets. This is where Picasso
and Henry Moore had their first UK shows, cutting and controversial
edge of the British arts world. experimental progressive radical obscure
films, music and club nights, photography, art, theatre, music, lectures,
multimedia works and book readings. Jewel Tower, The Jewel Tower,
treasury of Edward III, medieval Palace of Westminster. history and
procedures of Parliament. House of Commons. Jewish Museum, Judaism
and Judaistic religious practices, Ceremonial Art Gallery, Jewish
community in Britain from the time of the Normans to the present day
through paintings, photographs and artefacts in the History Gallery.
Karl Marx Memorial Library, Clerkenwell has quite a radical history.
An area of Victorian-era slums (the so-called Rookery), it was settled
by mainly Italian immigrants in the 19th century. Modern Italy's founding
father Garibaldi, European exile, Lenin edited 17 editions of the
Russian-language Bolshevik newspaper Iskra (Spark). Keats House, A
stone's throw from the lower reaches of the heath, this elegant Regency
house was home to the golden boy of the Romantic poets. Keats wrote
his most celebrated poem, Ode to a Nightingale , whilst sitting under
a plum tree (now replaced). Kennington Park, rabble-rousing tradition.
common, where all were permitted entry, it acted as a speakers' corner
for South London. After the great Chartist rally, where millions of
working-class people turned out to demand the same voting rights as
the middle classes, the royal family promptly fenced off and patrolled
the common as a park. Kensal Green Cemetery, Thackeray and Trollope,
handsome Victorian cemetery, Kensington Gardens. Princess Diana's
memory, with a playground, a walk and now a fountain dedicated to
her. Art is another feature - George Frampton's famous statue of Peter
Pan is close to the lake, beside an attractive area known as Flower
Walk. There are also sculptures by Henry Moore and Jacob Epstein here.
Kensington Palace, Diana, Princess of Wales, Kensington Palace's lawn
was covered with a mountain of flowers following the death of the
'people's princess' ,princess with unprecedented sentimentality. Royal
Ceremonial Dress Collection, Kenwood House, neoclassical mansion stands
in a glorious sweep of landscaped gardens leading down to a picturesque
lake. The house was remodelled by Robert Adam in the 18th century;
his Great Stairs and the library are especially fine. Today it contains
paintings by the likes of Gainsborough, Reynolds, Turner, Hals, Vermeer
and Van Dyck. Kew Gardens, Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew, popular visitors'
attractions in London, lawns, formal gardens and greenhouses has delights
to offer. Kinetica -clear glass walls of the UK's first museum dedicated
to kinetic, electric and magnetic art. Whether it's a robot playing
drums or a giant inflatable figure 'squirming' on the floor, King's
Road, Charles II set up a Chelsea love nest here for him and his mistress,
an orange-seller turned actress at the Drury Lane Theatre by the name
of Nell Gwyn. Heading back to Hampton Court Palace of an evening,
Charles would make use of a farmer's track that inevitably came to
be known as the King's Rd. The street begins at Sloane Sq, to the
north of which runs Sloane St, celebrated for its designer boutiques.
Lambeth Palace - redbrick Tudor gatehouse beside the church of St
Mary-at-Lambeth leads to Lambeth Palace, the London residence of the
Archbishop of Canterbury. Leadenhall Market, Victorian London, a visit
to this dimly lit, covered mall is a minor time-travelling experience.
market on this site since the Roman era, but the architecture that
survives is all cobblestones and late-19th-century ironwork; e Diagon
Alley in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone. Leighton House
-quiet street near Holland Park, George Aitchison, Lord Leighton,
a painter belonging to the Olympian movement. Linley Sambourne House,
Kensington High St, Punch political cartoonist and amateur photographer
Linley Sambourne, typical home of a well-to-do Victorian family: dark
wood, Turkish carpets and rich stained glass. Lloyd's of London, world's
leading insurance brokerstrains, planes and ships to cosmonauts' lives
and film stars' legs, stainless steel external ducting and staircases
of the Lloyd's of London building. French free climber, or 'spiderman',
Alain Robert London Canal Museum, housed in an old ice warehouse (with
a deep well where the frozen commodity was stored) Regent's Canal,
the ice business and the development of ice cream through models,
photographs, exhibits and archive documentaries. London Dungeon, Tooley
St railway bridge, the London Dungeon, Madame Tussauds Chamber of
Horrors frightening enough. London Eye, you can see 25 miles in every
direction from the top of the world's tallest Ferris wheel. To the
west lies Windsor, while to the east the sea. In between, you have
the chance to pick out familiar landmarks. A ride in one of the wheel's
32 glass-enclosed gondolas holding up to 25 people is something you
really can't miss, London Transport Museum, buses from the horse age
until today, plus taxis, trains and all other modes of transport)
and more new collections, more display space and a 120-seat lecture
theatre for educational purposes. You can get your Mind the Gap boxer
shorts and knickers at the museum shop. London Wetland Centre, inland
wetland projects, Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust, Victorian reservoirs,
London Zoo, these zoological gardens are among the oldest in the world.
This is where the word 'zoo' originated. London Zoo, conservation,
education and breeding, with fewer species and more spacious conditions.
Lord's Cricket Ground - 'home of cricket' is a must for any devotee
of this peculiarly English game: the ground and facilities, which
takes in the famous Long Room, where members watch the games surrounded
by portraits of cricket's great and good, and a museum featuring evocative
memorabilia that will appeal to fans old and new. Madame Tussauds
- wax celebrities, movie stars and fantastically lifelike figures
of the Windsors, you're in for a treat. Marble Arch, John Nash, Hyde
Park, Buckingham Palace, royal manor. London's grandest bedsit. Marble
Hill House, Palladian love nest, originally built for George II's
mistress Henrietta Howard and later occupied by Mrs Fitzherbert, the
secret wife of George IV. The poet Alexander Pope had a hand in designing
the park, which stretches down to the Thames. Henrietta, early-Georgian
furniture. Michelin House - Art Nouveau Michelin House was built for
Michelin, François Espinasse, upmarket fish and flower stalls,
modern stained glass, tiles showing early-20th-century cars. Mile
End Park - Burdett and Grove Rds and the Grand Union Canal. Piers
Gough's 'green bridge' Mile End Rd. Millennium Bridge - 'wobbly' bridge,
the Millennium Bridge, 10,000 people a day…St Paul's Cathedral
through the Perspex decking at the bridge's southern end. Museum in
Docklands,200-year-old warehouse once used to store sugar, rum and
coffee, this museum offers a comprehensive overview of the entire
history of the Thames from the arrival of the Romans, Museum Of Immigration
& Diversity, Huguenot town house, housed a prosperous family of
weavers, home to waves of immigrants including Polish, Irish and Jewish
families, museum of immigration and diversity, whose carefully considered
exhibits are aimed at both adults and children, Museum of London,
Museum of London is one of the capital's best museums Anglo-Saxon
village to global financial centre. Museum of Rugby, rugby-lovers,
is tucked behind the eastern stand of the stadium. 10,000 items related
to the sport. National Army Museum, next door to the Royal Hospital,
history of the British army from the perspective of the men and women,
horrors and perceived glories of war, National Gallery, Western European
paintings on display, the National Gallery is one of the largest galleries
in the world. But it's the quality of the works, and not the quantity,
that impresses most. history of art. National Maritime Museum, this
museum designed to tell the long and convoluted history of Britain
as a seafaring nation is the most impressive sight in Greenwich. From
the moment you step through the entrance to this magnificent neoclassical
building you'll be won over. And it just gets better as you progress
through the glass-roofed Neptune Court into the rest of this three-storey
building. National Portrait Gallery, Excellent for putting faces to
names over the last five centuries of British history, the gallery
houses a primary collection of some 10,000 works, which are regularly
rotated, among them the museum's first acquisition, the famous 'Chandos'
portrait of Shakespeare. Natural History Museum, Victorian pursuit
of collecting and cataloguing. Life Galleries, Cromwell Rd, Victorian
gentleman scientist. blue and sand-coloured brick and terracotta,
Alfred Waterhouse, diplodocus dinosaur skeleton in the entrance hall.
New London Architecture, A large model of the capital highlights the
new building areas, shows the extent of the 2012 Olympics plans and
various neighbourhood regeneration programmes. No 10 Downing St, British
prime ministers have it pretty good postcode-wise. Number 10 has been
the official office of British leaders since 1732, when George II
presented No 10 to Robert Walpole, and since refurbishment in 1902
it's also been the PM's official London residence. As Margaret Thatcher,
a grocer's daughter, famously put it, the PM 'lives above the shop'
here, No 2 Willow Rd, Fans of modern architecture will want to swing
past this property, the central house in a block of three, designed
by the 'structural rationalist' Ernö Goldfinger. artworks by
Henry Moore, Max Ernst and Bridget Riley. O2 (Millennium Dome, O2
(renamed from the Millennium Dome in 2005) Tutankhamun and the Golden
Age of the Pharaohs., Old Operating Theatre Museum & Herb Garret,
narrow and rickety 32-step tower of St Thomas Church, focuses on the
nastiness of 19th-century hospital treatment. The garret was used
by the apothecary of St Thomas's Hospital to store medicinal herbs
and now houses an atmospheric medical museum delightfully hung with
bunches of herbs that soften the impact of the horrible devices displayed
in the glass cases. Old Royal Naval College, the Painted Hall and
the chapel Greenwich Tourist Information Centre in the Pepys Building.
Christopher Wren naval hospital view of the river from the Queen's
House, Inigo Jones' , Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, Egyptian,
most impressive collections of Egyptian and Sudanese archaeology in
the world. Behind glass - and amid an atmosphere of academia - are
exhibits ranging from fragments of pottery to the world's oldest dress
(2800 BC). Photographers' Gallery, O'Donnell + Tuomey Architects.
Piccadilly Circus, Together with Big Ben and Trafalgar Sq, this is
postcard London. And despite the stifling crowds and racing midday
traffic, the flashing ads and buzzing liveliness of Piccadilly Circus
always make it exciting to be in London. The circus looks its best
at night, when the flashing advertisement panels really shine against
the dark sky. Pollock's Toy Museum, Simultaneously creepy and mesmerising,
this museum is aimed at both kids and adults. You walk in through
the museum shop laden with excellent wooden toys and various games,
and start your exploration by climbing up a rickety narrow staircase.
Princess Diana Memorial Fountain, Queen's Chapel, contemporary royals
from Princess Diana to the Queen Mother - Inigo Jones in the Palladian
style post-Reformation, Roman Catholic worship. Queen's Gallery, Paintings,
sculpture, ceramics, furniture and jewellery, royals over 500 years.
John Nash as a conservatory. It was converted into a chapel for Victoria,
Queen's House, 'House of Delight', Palladian building by architect
Inigo Jones after he returned from Italy, Turners, Holbeins, Hogarths
and Gainsboroughs. Ragged School Museum, Ragged School Museum, a combination
of mock Victorian schoolroom - with hard wooden benches and desks,
slates, chalk, inkwells and abacuses - on the 1st floor, and social
history museum below. 'Ragged' was a Victorian term used to refer
to pupils' usually torn, dirty and dishevelled clothes. Ranger's House,
Georgian villa, Greenwich Park, once housed the park's ranger. works
of art (medieval and Renaissance paintings, porcelain, silverware,
tapestries etc) amassed by one Julius Wernher, a German-born railway
engineer's son who struck it rich in the diamond fields of South Africa,
Red House, From the outside, this redbrick house built by Victorian
designer William Morris in 1860 conjures up a gingerbread house in
stone. The nine rooms open to the public bear all the elements of
the 'Arts and Crafts' style to which Morris adhered - a bit of Gothic
art here, some religious symbolism there. Regent's Park, London's
many parks, Regent's was createdby John Nash, he could build palaces
for the aristocracy. buildings along the Outer Circle, and in particular
from the stuccoed Palladian mansions he built on Cumberland Tce. Richmond
Park, At just over 1000 hectares (the largest urban parkland in Europe),
Richmond Park, formal gardens, ancient oaks to unsurpassed views of
central London, several roads that cut up the rambling wilderness,
making the park an excellent spot for a quiet walk or picnic, even
in summer when Richmond's riverside can be heaving. Rose Theatre,
The Rose, for which Christopher Marlowe and Ben Jonson wrote their
greatest plays and in which Shakespeare learned his craft, is unique
in that its original 16th-century foundations have been unearthed.
They were discovered in 1989 beneath an office building at Southwark
Bridge and given a protective concrete cover. Administered by the
Globe Theatre, the Rose is open to the public only when matinees are
being performed at the Globe Theatre. Royal Academy of Arts, Britain's
first art school, free art, thanks to the John Madejski's Fine Rooms,
where drawings ranging from Constable, Reynolds, Gainsborough and
Turner to Hockney. Royal Albert Hall, This huge, domed, redbrick amphitheatre
adorned with a frieze of Minton tiles is Britain's most famous concert
venue. The home of the BBC's Promenade Concerts (or 'Proms') every
summer, it was ironically never meant to be a concert venue. Instead,
this 1871 memorial to Queen Victoria's husband was intended as a hall
of arts and sciences. Royal Courts of Justice, Strand joins Fleet
St, gargantuan melange of Gothic spires, pinnacles and burnished Portland
stone, designed by aspiring cathedral builder GE Street. Royal Geographical
Society, Royal Albert Hall, headquarters of the Royal Geographical
Society, Queen Anne-style redbrick edifice (1874), explorers David
Livingstone and Ernest Shackleton outside. Exhibition Rd. Royal Hospital
Chelsea, Christopher Wren, shelter for ex-servicemen. housed hundreds
of war veterans, Chelsea Pensioners. They're fondly regarded as national
treasures, and cut striking figures in the dark-blue greatcoats (in
winter) or scarlet frock coats (in summer) that they wear on ceremonial
occasions. Royal Mews, South of the palace, the Royal Mews started
life as a falconry but is now a working stable looking after the royals'
immaculately groomed horses, along with the opulent vehicles the monarchy
uses for getting from A to B. Highlights include the stunning gold
coach of 1762, which has been used for every coronation since that
of George III, and the Glass Coach of 1910, used for royal weddings.
Royal Observatory, Charles II had the Royal Observatory built on a
hill in the middle of the Greenwich Park, establish longitude at sea.
The Octagon Room, designed by Wren, and the nearby Sextant Room are
where John Flamsteed, the first astronomer royal, made his observations
and calculations. Royal Opera House, On the northeastern flank of
the piazza is the gleaming, redeveloped - and practically new - Royal
Opera House. Unique 'behind the scenes' tours take you through the
venue, and let you experience the planning, excitement and hissy fits
that take place before a performance at one of the world's busiest
opera houses. As it's a working theatre, plans can change so you'd
best call ahead. Of course, the best way to enjoy it is by seeing
a performance. Science Museum, progressive and accessible museums
of its kind, interactive and educational exhibits, informative and
entertaining, every age group. Serpentine Gallery, tea pavilion in
the midst of the leafy Kensington Gardens, Damien Hirst, Andreas Gursky,
Louise Bourgeois, Gabriel Orozco and Tomoko Takahashi, natural light
onto sculpture and interactive displays. Serpentine Lake, Hyde Park
is separated from Kensington Gardens by Serpentine lake, Westbourne
RiverAt Christmas, it's the site of a brass-balls swimming race, rent
pedalos. solar ferry going veeerry slowly from the boathouse to the
Lido Café. Shakespeare's Globe, Shakespeare's Globe reconstructed
Globe Theatre exhibition hall, Rose Theatre. exhibition focuses on
Elizabethan London and stagecraft, Sherlock Holmes Museum, Victoriana,
deerstalkers, burning candles, flickering grates, waxworks of Professor
Moriarty and 'the Man with the Twisted Lip'. Arthur Conan Doyle. Sir
John Soane's Museum, atmospheric and fascinating sights in London.
Sir John Soane effects and curiosities, exquisite and eccentric taste.
Smithfield Market, Smithfield is central London's meat market. smooth
field where animals could be grazed, notorious St Bartholomew's fair,
where witches were traditionally burned at the stake, Scottish Independence
leader William Wallace was executed, Somerset House, Passing beneath
the arch towards this splendid Palladian masterpiece, it's hard to
believe that the magnificent courtyard in front of you, with its 55
dancing fountains, was a car park for tax collectors up until a spectacular
refurbishment in 2000. William Chambers designed the house in 1775
for royal societies and it now contains three fabulous museums. Somerset
House Museums, Courtauld Institute of Art impressionism and post-impressionism,
with works by Cézanne, Degas, Gauguin, Monet, Matisse, Renoir
and Van Gogh. The Hermitage Rooms St Petersburg's State Hermitage
Museum. Southwark Cathedral, atmospheric retrochoir, Priory of St
Mary Overie (from 'St Mary over the Water'). Victorian. Speakers'
Corner, oratorical acrobatics and soapbox ranting. demonstrators can
assemble without police permission, demonstrate against the Sunday
Trading Bill before Parliament. Spencer House, Spencer House first
Earl Spencer, an ancestor of Princess Diana, Palladian Lord Rothschild,
St Andrew Holborn, Holborn Circus, rebuilt by Wren, St Bartholomew-the-Great,
Norman church, monastery of Augustinian Canons, Smithfield King Henry
VIII Norman arches, weathered and blackened stone, the dark wood carvings
and the low lighting. St Bride's, Fleet Street, Rupert Murdoch Wapping
'the journalists' church'. John McCarthy and Terry Anderson, St Clement
Danes, St Clements - St Clements Eastcheap in the City - Luftwaffe
- allied airmen. St George's Bloomsbury, Nicholas Hawksmoor, Corinthian
capitals, Mausoleum of Halicarnassus. George I in Roman dress. St
Giles-in-the-Fields, BCity and Westminster, St Giles church leprosy
hospital. St James's Palace, Tudor gatehouse of St James's Palace,
Henry VIII St James's St official residence of kings and queens foreign
ambassadors Court of St James, tea and biscuits served at Buckingham
Palace. St James's Park, smallest but most gorgeous of London's parks.
views of the London Eye, Westminster, St James's Palace, Carlton Terrace
and Horse Guards Parade, and the view of Buckingham Palace from the
footbridge spanning St James's Park Lake. St James's Piccadilly, Christopher
Wren Great Fire warm and elegant user-friendliness. The spire, although
designed by Wren, was added only in 1968. St John's Gate, medieval
gate cutting across St John's Lane Crusades, the Knights of St John
of Jerusalem Clerkenwell they established a priory, St John's Smith
Square, Thomas Archer in 1728 Fifty New Churches Act, St Katharine's
Dock, cafés and restaurants, St Katharine's Dock Tower Bridge
or the Tower of London. shops and a popular pub called the Dickens
Inn opulent luxury yachts in the marina. St Lawrence Jewry, Sir Christopher
Wren City of London, St Martin-in-the-Fields, The 'royal parish church'
is a delightful fusion of classical and baroque styles, St Pancras
Chambers, Victorian Gothic masterpiece Houses of Parliament. St Pancras'
train station and with the adjacent Eurostar Terminal George Gilbert
Scott St Pancras International, I King's Cross St Pancras station,
fabulously imposing Victorian Gothic masterpiece, hotel by the renowned
architect George Gilbert Scott, St Paul's Cathedral, Ludgate Hill,
Sir Christopher Wren's masterwork, St Peter's Church, Norman church
Georgian box pews, Staple Inn, Staple Inn Chancery Inns of CourtInstitute
of Actuaries, Sunday Up Market & Truman Brewery, The Old Truman
Brewery shops, bars and a Sunday barbecue along Dray Walk, Up Market,
Spitalfields Market young designer fashion, Sutton House, Tudor noblemen
such as Thomas Sutton, founder of the Charterhouse almshouse, living
in 'ackney, but as East London's oldest surviving house National Trust,
Syon House, Kew Gardens, Syon House medieval abbey named after Mt
Zion, but in 1542 Henry VIII Bridgettine nuns, Tate Britain, Tate
Britain Tate Modern, collection of British art, Tate Modern, Carl
Höller's funfair-like slides, Olafur Eliasson's participatory
The Weather Project , both in the vast Turbine Hall and poked holes
in its collection. London's most visited sight. Temple Churchwalls
of the Temple, built by the legendary Knights Templar, protect pilgrims
travelling to and from Jerusalem. older headquarters in Holborn. Thames
Flood Barrier, Thames Flood Barrier is in place to protect London
from flooding, rising sea levels and surge tides, consists of 10 movable
gates anchored to nine concrete piers, each as tall as a five-storey
building. The Garden Museum, Kew Gardens, Museum of Garden History
church of St Mary-at-Lambeth seriously green-thumbed. charming knot
garden, formal garden, with topiary hedges intricate, twirling design.
Tower Bridge, Big Ben as London's most recognisable symbol, Tower
Bridge neo-Gothic towers and blue suspension struts revolutionary
bascule (seesaw) mechanism, Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park, Magnificent
Seven, Highgate and Abney Park in Stoke Newington act of Parliament
London's rapid population growth turned into a park and nature reserve.
Tower of London, Tower of London, murder and political skulduggery
have reigned as much as kings and queens, Trinity Buoy Wharf, London's
only lighthouse, Michael Faraday Canary Wharf. Container City, web
designers, architects and other creative tenants even have their own
balconies. Tyburn Convent, Tyburn Tree gallows where many Catholics
were executed place of Catholic pilgrimage. Tyburn Tree, Marble Arch
infamous Tyburn Tree,dragged from the Tower of London. V&A Museum
Of Childhood, Victorian-era building Royal Institute of British Architects
(RIBA) award for outstanding design, antique doll houses, model trains,
teddy bears and other toys arranged thematically. Victoria & Albert
Museum, V&A, give yourself plenty of time, The Museum of Manufactures,
decorative art and design, with four million objects collected over
the years from Britain and around the globe. Victoria Park, Mile End
Park affords, Grove Rd, Victoria Park. lakes, fountains, a bowling
green, tennis courts, a deer park, East End's first public park, MP
presented Queen Victoria, Vinopolis, Vinopolis, Victorian railway
vaults in Bankside, red, white and rosé. Wallace Collection,
London's finest small gallery the Wallace Collection Italianate mansion
paintings, porcelain, artefacts and furniture Sir Richard Wallace
the centre of London. Wandsworth Common, Clapham, Wandsworth Common
toast rack, Baskerville, Dorlcote, Henderson, Nicosia, Patten and
Routh Rds are lined with Georgian houses. David Lloyd George. Wellington
Arch, Apsley House, Hyde Park Corner Arc de Triomphe, Napoleon's at
the hands of Wellington). West End Theatre, London's West End, music
gigs, comedy shows etc, Leicester Sq. Westminster Abbey, Westminster
Abbey British royalty political and artistic idols, Edward V and Edward
VIII, William the Conqueror in 1066, Henry III to George II were buried
here. Westminster Cathedral, John Francis Bentley's neo-Byzantine
architecture: candy-striped redbrick and white-stone tower west London
skyline. Roman Catholic Church in Britain. White Cube Gallery, Charles
Saatchi, erstwhile Saatchi Gallery, the White Cube's Jay Jopling 'Britart'
White Cube Britain's 'new establishment' Damien Hirst, Tracey Emin
another White Cube in St James's. Whitechapel Art Gallery, Whitechapel
Art Gallery Whitechapel Laboratory, changing exhibitions, live music,
poetry, talks and film. an Education and Research Tower and a street-facing
café. Whitechapel Bell Foundry, The Whitechapel Bell Foundry
Big Ben and the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia were cast here, and the
New York City's Trinity Church, Wimbledon Common, Putney Heath, Wimbledon
CommonSouth London for walking, nature trailing and picnicking. Caesar's
Camp settled before Roman times. Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Museum, specialist
interest,tennis playing, tall-important lawnmower and of the India-rubber
ball video tearoom and a shop selling tennis memorabilia. Winchester
Palace, Winchester rose window carved Great Hall, rose window was
discovered in a Clink St Women's Library Whitechapel Art Gallery,
Women's Library, London Metropolitan University, women's history.
archive and museum collections.