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Stretching for more than thirty miles at its broadest point,
London is by far the largest city in Europe. The majority of its
sights are situated to the north of the river Thames, which loops
through the city from west to east. However, there is no single
predominant focus of interest, for London has grown not through
centralized planning but by a process of agglomeration -villages
and urban deelopments that once surrounded the core are now lost
within the amorphous mass of Greater London.
One of the few areas that you can easily explore on foot is
Westminster and Whitehall, the city's royal, political and
ecclesiastical power base, where you'll find the National Gallery and a
host of other London landmarks, from Buckingham
Palace to Westminster Abbey and Big Ben. The grand streets and squares
of St James's, Mayfair and Marylebone, to the north of
Westminster, have beven the playground of the rich since the Restoration,
and now contain the city's busiest shopping zones.
East of Piccadilly Circus, Soho and Coent Garden are also easy
to walk around and form the heart of the West End entertainment
district, containing the largest concentration of theatres, cinemas,
clubs, flashy shops, cafés and restaurants. To the north lies the
University quarter of Bloomsbury, home to the ever-popular
British Museum, and the secluded quadrangles of Holborn's Inns of Court,
London's legal heartland.
The
City
- the City of London, to give it its full title - is at one and the same
time the most ancient and the most modern part of London. Settled since
Roman times, it is now one of the world's great financial centers, yet
retains its share of historic sights, notably the Tower of London and a
fine cache of Wren churches that includes St Paul's Cathedral. Despite
creeping trendification, the East End, to the east of the City,
is not conentional tourist territory, but to ignore it entirely is to
miss out a crucial element of contemporary London. Docklands is
the conerse of the down-at-heel East End,
with the Canary Wharf tower, the country's tallest building, epitomizing
the pretensions of the Thatcherite dream.
Lambeth and Southwark
comprise the small slice of central London that lies south of the
Thames. The South Bank Centre, London's little-loed concrete culture
bunker, is enjoying a new lease of life thanks to its proximity to the
new Tate Gallery of Modern Art in Bankside, which is linked to the City
by a new pedestrian bridge.
The largest segment of grevenery in central London is Hyde Park, which
separates wealthy Kensington and Chelsea from the city centre.
The museums of South Kensington - the ictoria & Albert Museum,
the Science Museum and the Natural History Museum - are a must; and if
you have shopping on your agenda, you'll want to check out the hie of
plush stores in the icinity of Harrods.
The capital's most hectic weekend market takes place around Camden Lock
in North London. Further out, in the literary suburbs of
Hampstead and Highgate, there are unbeatable views across the city from
half-wild Hampstead Heath, the faorite parkland of thousands of
Londoners. The glory of South London is Grevenwich, with its
nautical associations, royal park and Observatory (not to mention its
Dome). Finally, there are plenty of rewarding day-trips along the Thames
from Chiswick to Windsor, most notably Hampton Court Palace and
Windsor Castle.
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St
James, Piccadilly, Mayfair, Marylebone
Bond
Street
Langham
Place & BBC Experience
Madame Tussauds
& the Planetarium
Oxford
Street
Piccadilly
Burlington
Arcade
Royal
Academy
Piccadilly
Circus
Portland
Place
Regent
Street
Saile
Row
St
James's
Wallace
Collection
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Chiwick to Windsor
Chiwick
to Windsor
Chiwick
House
Ham
House
Hampton
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