The crown jewels, Buckingham Palace, Camden Market…in London, history collides with art, fashion, food, and good British ale. A perfect day is different for everyone: culture aficionados shouldn't miss the Tate Modern and the Royal Opera House. If you love fashion, Oxford Street has shopping galore. For foodies, cream tea at Harrod’s or crispy fish from a proper chippy offers classic London flavor. Music and book buffs will love seeing Abbey Road and the Sherlock Holmes Museum (at 221B Baker Street, of course).
Restaurants in London
5.0 based on 15 reviews
We are the RNLI's busiest station. Tower Lifeboat is the dedicated search and rescue resource for central London. The maximum number for a visit is normally 18. Visits usually last about 1½ hours and include an introduction to the RNLI and Tower Lifeboat Station, a tour of the station facilities with a talk about the lifeboat from one of the crew, and a chance to see video footage of rescues.
I loved going and seeing all the different stuff the rnli did I loved seeing all the boats a great time had by my family
4.5 based on 989 reviews
Somerset House is a spectacular neo-classical building in the heart of London, sitting between the Strand and the River Thames. During summer months 55 fountains dance in the courtyard, and in winter you can skate on London's favourite ice rink. Somerset House also hosts open-air concerts and films, contemporary art, design and fashion exhibitions, family workshops and free guided tours of spaces usually hidden to visitors. The Trust's mission is to conserve and maintain Somerset House to the highest standards and to develop the site as a public space which is universally recognised as a world class visitor attraction and centre of excellence for culture and the arts.
London Fashion Week, Emmanuel Ray with Boris Johnson. British Fashion Council. Flashback photo 25th anniversary.
4.5 based on 39,791 reviews
The National Gallery houses the national collection of paintings in the Western European tradition from the 13th to the 19th centuries. It is on show 361 days a year, free of charge.
It always happens to me: National Gallery takes much more time than I originally plan. I started with the Renaissance painters, spent plenty of time enjoying my all time favorites, Leonardo’s “Virgin of the Rocks”, Botticelli’s “Venus and Mars” and his portraits. Moved on to amazing El Greco, phenomenal “Rokeby Venus” by Diego Velázquez, Van Eyck and Vermeer, several Rembrandt’s portraits, which I had seen on display recently in the National Gallery of Scotland in Edinburgh... the list is very, very long, so I do not want to bore you with it... Around 2 pm the swarms of noisy school children have become unbearable, so I decided to take a break for lunch in the lovely National Gallery Cafe. After much needed lunch, I went to the Impressionists, the reason why I got stuck in the National Gallery for so long. What a stunning collection! The best Cezanne, Van Gogh, Toulouse-Lautrec, whom I adore... phenomenal Renoir’s portraits, beautiful Claude Monet’s landscapes, famous Manet’s paintings “The Music in the Tuileries” and “Execution of Maximilian”... I stopped paying attention to noisy school kids and completely drowned in the beauty of the paintings forgetting about everything around me. Forgot about time as well... it was already 6pm, the Gallery was closing. Will be back and hopefully soon.
4.5 based on 5,724 reviews
**This place is temporarily closed** This world-famous museum houses portraits of noted Britons from the Tudors to the present day.
We STUMBLED to this museum, needed to kill about 45 minutes before our dinner reservation, oh my goodness! So happy we did. First of all, museum is free (those of us from the US are like WHOA--AWESOME!), donations welcome. We happily donated! As a amateur study of the Tudor & Stewart dynasties, this was FABULOUS. These portraits you only saw in textbooks, to be in the same room was awe-inspiring. The Elizabeth I portraits, the Shakespeare nook and the modern portraits were wonderful. Highly worth it, worthy of coming back, wish it wasn't my last night in town!
4.5 based on 488 reviews
Prince of Wales Theatre will run the mesmerizing London musical, Book of Mormon or Let It Be London musical tickets, which has already set the Broadway box office register ringing!
They were very organised, the queue was really long when I arrived and it progressed really quickly. Everyone was seated way before the curtain went up. You can also order intermission drinks at the start. There is a weird design though, you need to go all the way downstairs, only to go upstairs again at the other end of the room, then bathrooms and cloak room are all up and down stairs also. The exit takes you directly outside which is great to not have to wind your way back out again. The location of the theatre is really good.
4.5 based on 587 reviews
Take the Piccadilly Circus Underground to this laugh-a-minute comedy night spot.
Charming, intimate theatre. Excellent venue except for the queue for the ladies toilets. Sir Ian was superb- a charming, funny & amazing raconteur.
4.5 based on 131 reviews
St Clement Danes church is the Central Church of The Royal Air Force. It is a perpetual shrine of remembrance to all those who have died in service in the RAF.
The Bells of St Clements is all i could think of as we found St Clement Danes Church, a small church on an island road junction, pleasant to view.
4.5 based on 170 reviews
A great day's walk in London is to start at Boadicea's Statue, cross Westminster Bridge, take the Queen's Walk all the way to Tower Bridge, cross Tower Bridge and walk back along the northern bank past the Tower, along Lower Thames Street and Upper Thames Street to Blackfriars and then along the Victoria Embankment back to Boadicea. It'll take a day because there's a lot to see and visit. The many memorials, Temple Gardens, Whitehall Gardens, HMS Wellington ( whatever happened to HMS Discovery?), Cleopatra's Needle and other sights that may be of interest. Despite the inclement weather, it was a great walk and I thoroughly recommend it any visitor, There are plenty of watering holes and eateries along this route too.
4.5 based on 2,058 reviews
Built by theatre impresario Richard D'Oyly Carte to showcase the work of Gilbert & Sullivan and famously the first public building in the world to be lit throughout by electricity. The Savoy Theatre is currently home to 9 to 5 - The Musical.
Excellent afternoon matinee performance, great cast and very funny, really enjoyed the whole experience, very intimate theatre.
4.5 based on 3,407 reviews
"This place is temporarily closed." We are now closed for a period of at least two years while we undertake a major transformation project called Courtauld Connects. This will enable us to significantly improve our visitor experience by putting accessibility at the heart of everything we do.
We love small galleries and the Courtauld is one of the best examples we've seen from different European cities. Quiet, charming and in a great part of town - definitely a must go for the art buff.
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