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Post by Phantom of London on Jul 10, 2021 20:05:18 GMT
If you are not needing a umbrella, then you cannot beat the London’s Parks and it is all free.
Regent’s Park is the best, especially the boating lakes and rose gardens.
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Post by WireHangers on Jul 19, 2021 15:01:55 GMT
Thank you so much for all the suggestion!! You have all made making my itinerary much harder because I want to do everything you’ve suggested.
Can anyone recommend any pre or post theatre restaurants? I’m thinking of something like Bob Bob Richard or Ting at The Shard (but less touristy)
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Post by eua78 on Jul 19, 2021 15:07:01 GMT
Not quite unusual but I'd recommend the sky garden, just near the shard and free to enter, some great views on a clear day from the viewing deck. Wouldn't eat or drink there but worth it for the view 👌
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Post by ruby on Jul 31, 2021 11:42:45 GMT
I'll be staying near the Barbican on Sat 14 Aug - anyone know of anything to do around there (or a reasonable taxi ride away) during the day?
My companion can't walk far and we've already done the Museum of London.
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Post by TallPaul on Jul 31, 2021 12:13:48 GMT
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Post by ruby on Jul 31, 2021 12:25:30 GMT
Good thinking, thanks! We are indeed off to Singin' in the Rain and Anything Goes 😁
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Post by cavocado on Jul 31, 2021 12:53:49 GMT
I'll be staying near the Barbican on Sat 14 Aug - anyone know of anything to do around there (or a reasonable taxi ride away) during the day? My companion can't walk far and we've already done the Museum of London. The Barbican Conservatory is a nice place to spend an hour if you like plants. It's free but you have to book. And I enjoyed the Jean Dubuffet exhibition in the Barbican art gallery if that's your kind of thing.
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Post by Jan on Jul 31, 2021 14:21:35 GMT
How about the Marble Arch mound ?
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Post by Deleted on Jul 31, 2021 14:46:26 GMT
How about the Marble Arch mound ? Is there such a thing as a tourist repulsion?
It should revel in its mediocrity. "Exciting, stimulating, memorable; this is none of those and less. London has many wonderful attractions and it also has this. Is it as unimpressive as everyone says? Come and see for yourself. The Marble Arch Mound: experience the expected."
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Post by emsworthian on Jul 31, 2021 16:21:25 GMT
If you are staying near The Barbican, how about a visit to St Giles Without Cripplegate, the church within the Barbican? Milton was buried there, Oliver Cromwell married there and Rick Wakeman recorded part of his "Six Wives of Henry VIII" on the organ there.
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Post by ruby on Jul 31, 2021 17:35:33 GMT
Thanks all for your interesting suggestions, I think we would enjoy all of those. I've booked a champagne afternoon tea at St Pancras but we should be able to do something else beforehand.
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Post by greeny11 on Jul 31, 2021 18:49:16 GMT
Lots of good recommendations. I'd say seeing the city from the river is one of my favourite things to do - by speedboat is great. I use Thames Rockets (the red boats) for this and they are excellent - they tend to use actors/comedians as guides and they are excellent. Also, the Thames Clippers are an excellent way of getting about as well. I would recommend Greenwich, which has lots of things to see and do, and only a 40-minute ride on the Clippers from central London.
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Post by jek on Aug 5, 2022 7:40:34 GMT
Bumping this thread as I didn't know where else to post this. The current temporary exhibition at the Wallace Collection is 'Inspiring Walt Disney: The Animation of French Decorative Arts'. It's quite small and very lovely. The emphasis is, understandably, on Cinderella and Beauty and The Beast, but there is a wonderful corner where Fragonard's The Swing (beautifully restored) hangs alongside art work for Tangled and Frozen - whose creative teams found inspiration from the image. I got in for half price as I have an Art Pass. There is also a reasonably priced catalogue. And, of course, the Wallace Collection is home to many great - and in the case of the Laughing Cavalier very familiar - paintings.
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4,211 posts
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Post by anthony40 on Aug 5, 2022 9:43:49 GMT
Although not located in the City, the West End or indeed in the heart of London, the Hornimam Museum is also great! www.horniman.ac.uk/Whilst I was are of it, I had never been to it until last week when I had a week off work. It has just been voted The Art Fund Museum of 2022. Located in Forrest Hill on the London Overground, is 15 minutes from London Bridge by train. There are permanent exhibitions on musical instruments, natural history and anthropology . There are also wonderful gardens with a bandstand, a butterfly house, an aquarium, a small petting zoo with rabbits, alpacas, chickens, etc and a crystal palace. With the exception of the cafe, the butterfly house and the aquarium, the whole thing is free. It's extremely good. Very family friendly. It was very busy when I was there.
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2,339 posts
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Post by theglenbucklaird on Aug 5, 2022 12:02:15 GMT
Although not located in the City, the West End or indeed in the heart of London, the Horniman Museum is also great!www.horniman.ac.uk/Whilst I was are of it, I had never been to it until last week when I had a week off work. It has just been voted The Art Fund Museum of 2022. Located in Forrest Hill on the London Overground, is 15 minutes from London Bridge by train. There are permanent exhibitions on musical instruments, natural history and anthropology . There are also wonderful gardens with a bandstand, a butterfly house, an aquarium, a small petting zoo with rabbits, alpacas, chickens, etc and a crystal palace. With the exception of the cafe, the butterfly house and the aquarium, the whole thing is free. It's extremely good. Very family friendly. It was very busy when I was there.
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Post by anthony40 on Aug 5, 2022 13:25:09 GMT
Another interesting place to visit is the Grant Museum of Zoology. www.ucl.ac.uk/culture/grant-museum-zoologyAccording to the website/: The Grant Museum is the only remaining university zoology museum in London and contains specimens from the whole of the animal kingdom. The collection dates from the 19th century and is still added to. The collection contains a wide range of material including fluid preserved, pinned entomology, taxidermy, freeze-dried and skeletal specimens. The Grant Museum offers an active and exciting range of educational programmes. The collection is an excellent resource for several different audiences, offering experiences for primary and secondary schools, art and special interest groups, and university classes. Only 7% of the collection is on display but the rest of the collection is primarily available for use in research. The Grant Museum welcomes research enquiries and the collection is available for the research community for study and sampling. You can see a Jar full of Moles (yep, you read it right), see a Quagga skeleton, glass models of invertebrates, red deer antlers, an African Rock Python Skeleton and the Brain Collection. There are also downloadable guides.
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Post by jek on Aug 5, 2022 13:52:26 GMT
The Grant Museum is very good. When my kids were small we used to sponsor a fossil in their collection and visit it regularly. And when my daughter was going through a - thankfully short lived - pink obsession, they took great care to take a pink fairy armadillo specimen out of its case so that she could have a close look.
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4,211 posts
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Post by anthony40 on Aug 5, 2022 13:55:32 GMT
Another interesting place to visit is the Royal London Hospital Museum. This small museum in a former church crypt contains artifacts of the Elephant Man, Jack the Ripper and Florence Nightingale. www.atlasobscura.com/places/royal-london-hospital-museumAccording to the website: The long history of the famous hospital is on display at a small museum across the street from its Whitehall quarters, which has been the hospital’s home since 1758. Housed in the former crypt of St. Augustine with St. Philip’s, a red brick 19th-century church, the eclectic collection includes artifacts and archival material relating to major medical figures and surgical history. Oh, and Jack the Ripper. And the Elephant Man. Sir Frederick Treves, the man who saved Joseph Merrick from a sideshow life, was in residence as a surgeon at the London Hospital. It was here, in 1886, that Dr. Treves cared for Merrick, made famous as the Elephant Man, until his death in 1890. The museum collection includes a replica of Merrick’s skeleton, cap, and burlap veil, some of his correspondence, and a remarkable model of the Cathedral of Mainz, built by Merrick’s own hand. The Hospital’s London neighborhood was also the focus of the Whitechapel Murders of 1888, better known as those of “Jack the Ripper.” At the time the hospital lent a forensic hand to the murder investigations, and its collection includes some archival and other materials that give detail to its involvement and assistance. It’s not all former circus freaks and grisly murders here at the Hospital Museum. There are collections and displays of some of Britain’s most important historical medical figures, including Florence Nightingale and Edith Cavell, who each helped transform what we now think of as nursing. Their contributions, along with those of Sir William Blizard and other prominent doctors, pathologists, and surgeons, helped establish the London Hospital — sorry, the Royal London Hospital – as a pre-eminent medical facility of the last three centuries.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 5, 2022 17:32:07 GMT
If you’ll forgive the observation, anthony40, I don’t think I could follow a visit to any of those suggestions with a scrumptious afternoon tea!!
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4,211 posts
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Post by anthony40 on Aug 5, 2022 18:24:39 GMT
If you’ll forgive the observation, anthony40, I don’t think I could follow a visit to any of those suggestions with a scrumptious afternoon tea!! Well it's not for everyone. Speaking from personal experience, the Royal London Hospital Museum, although small, is really quite moving. Especially The Elephant man artefacts.
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Post by theglenbucklaird on Aug 5, 2022 19:11:38 GMT
Although not located in the City, the West End or indeed in the heart of London, the Horniman Museum is also great!www.horniman.ac.uk/Whilst I was are of it, I had never been to it until last week when I had a week off work. It has just been voted The Art Fund Museum of 2022. Located in Forrest Hill on the London Overground, is 15 minutes from London Bridge by train. There are permanent exhibitions on musical instruments, natural history and anthropology . There are also wonderful gardens with a bandstand, a butterfly house, an aquarium, a small petting zoo with rabbits, alpacas, chickens, etc and a crystal palace. With the exception of the cafe, the butterfly house and the aquarium, the whole thing is free. It's extremely good. Very family friendly. It was very busy when I was there. On Gardeners World tonight
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Post by cartoonman on Jan 26, 2023 15:58:57 GMT
How about getting up really early (not Mondays) and going to the New Billinsgate Market. Take care not to get run over by porters with huge loads but it is a slice of real London that may soon move.
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Post by londonpostie on Jan 27, 2023 12:32:29 GMT
tbh, I'm still pretty chuffed sitting on the Elizabeth Line quietly going weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee! And then getting off, going to the other platform and doing it all again. If you want to get really spicy, get off at Canary Wharf and explore the station's roof garden.
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Post by jek on Jan 29, 2023 9:57:09 GMT
There is a beautiful exhibition currently showing at the very lovely Fitzrovia Chapel. The chapel is all that remains of Middlesex Hospital and the exhibition relates to photos taken on the AIDs ward of the hospital in 1993. The photos are projected onto a big screen and there is also a video showing on a loop of medical staff and family members recalling those days. As someone who was 30 in 1993 (and dressed in the same way as many of those featured in the photos) and had a close friend die of AIDs I found it incredibly sad but also life affirming. If you thought It's A Sin ripped your heart out then you will definitely need to take tissues to this. And for those of us still enamoured, like londonpostie, by the Elizabeth Line, it is a very easy walk from the Dean Street exit of the Tottenham Court Road Elizabeth Line station. I was able to get to the exhibition from my home in Stratford in less than half an hour. www.fitzroviachapel.org/event/the-ward-revisited-3/
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Post by samuelwhiskers on Jan 29, 2023 10:32:27 GMT
tbh, I'm still pretty chuffed sitting on the Elizabeth Line quietly going weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee! And then getting off, going to the other platform and doing it all again. If you want to get really spicy, get off at Canary Wharf and explore the station's roof garden. Did you see the giant spiders?
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