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Pepys Greenwich Walk
Samuel Pepys’ Walk through the eastern City of London and Greenwich Distance = 5 miles (8 km) Estimated duration = 3 – 4 hours not including the river trip to Greenwich Nearest underground stations: This is planned to start from the Monument underground station, but could be joined at several other places including Aldgate or Tower Hill underground stations. You can do this Walk on any day of the week, but my recommendation would be to do the first part on a Wednesday or a Thursday because there may be free lunchtime classical recitals in one of the churches that are on the route. The quietest time would be at the weekend because the main part of this Walk takes place in the heart of the business district of London, which is almost empty at that time. However this does mean that many places will be closed including ironically the churches as well as most of the pubs and Seething Lane Garden. It’s a good idea to buy a one-day bus pass or travel card if you don’t already have one, so that you needn’t walk the whole route but can jump on and off any bus going in your direction. This is based around the Pepys Diary website at www.pepysdiary.com and your photographs could be added to the Pepys group collection here: www.flickr.com/groups/pepysdiary. And if you aren't in London at present, perhaps you'd like to attempt a "virtual tour" through the hyperlinks, or alternatively explore London via google streetview, the various BBC London webcams or these ones, which are much more comprehensive. -
History and the Future
HISTORY AND THE FUTURE The conversion of these Victorian warehouses All around you lies a warren of old, cobbled streets, When the Pool of London teemed with tall ships, has given the capital some of its most dramatic where shipbrokers and chandleries have given way they unloaded coffee, cocoa beans, coconut living spaces. These are domestic interiors on an to art galleries, restaurants and fashionable shops. matting, oils, spices and dried fruit - then lowered industrial scale, where the raw simplicity of the Metropolitan Wharf is one of the last Docklands them onto horse-drawn carts which clattered off architecture creates the perfect backdrop to the warehouses to be restored, in a four year around London and beyond. best in modern design. programme of work that has retained as much of the historic fabric as possible. On the river side, enjoy big skies and ever- changing light as pleasure boats and workboats Metropolitan Wharf is steeped in history. It is come and go. On the city side, these buildings made up of four warehouse buildings, constructed provide a fresh perspective on the London skyline, between 1862 and 1898. The exterior features with spectacular views both day and night. some of Docklands’ fi nest jibs, cranes and hoists. WELCOME TO METROPOLITAN WHARF Walk into Metropolitan Wharf today and you will start to appreciate the exciting mix of past and present which characterises the entire development. The original brickwork, ceilings and cast iron columns look down on modern art and a striking copper reception desk - designed to patinate with age. Bottega Wapping - a busy cafe, delicatessen, As you look around you will see this is a multi-use development, wine bar and destination restaurant, where an urban village within a building. -
Modern Heritage Discover More 1
MODERN HERITAGE DISCOVER MORE 1 A NEW FUTURE WELCOME TO LONDON DOCK... Time has seen Wapping take on different roles but always with the same enduring spirit. It has constantly evolved and London Dock represents another proud chapter in its long and illustrious history. This new development is set against a landscape of world famous destinations and landmarks, in one of the most exciting cities in the world. Designed for 21st century living, this is where your adventure begins. London Dock, discover more. 2 LONDON DOCK DISCOVER MORE 3 Computer generated image. Indicative only 4 LONDON DOCK DISCOVER MORE 5 A PLACE OF CHARACTER AND HISTORY 1 2 ALONGSIDE THE BANKS OF THE RIVER THAMES, COLOURED BY THOUSANDS OF YEARS OF HISTORY, WAPPING HAS ALWAYS BEEN A HUB OF COMMERCE AND LIFE. By the late 18th Century, Wapping made London one of the busiest ports in the world. The building of The London Docks transformed a small riverside village into one of the liveliest districts in the Capital. Wapping was a gateway to the British Empire, a commercial centre and a mix of cultural influences. Celebrated figures made their home here, like explorer and captain of the Endeavour, James Cook. A resident of Wapping in the 1750s, he later became the first European to master the east coast of Australia. Wapping was also home to artists and writers. Charles Dickens drew inspiration from the area during visits to his godfather in nearby Limehouse. Much of what he saw of life in the docks and at the riverside became famous scenes in his books like Oliver Twist and Great Expectations. -
E Guide the Travel Guide with Its Own Website
Londonwww.elondon.dk.com e guide the travel guide with its own website always up-to-date d what’s happening now London e guide In style • In the know • Online www.elondon.dk.com Produced by Blue Island Publishing Contributors Jonathan Cox, Michael Ellis, Andrew Humphreys, Lisa Ritchie Photographer Max Alexander Reproduced in Singapore by Colourscan Printed and bound in Singapore by Tien Wah Press First published in Great Britain in 2005 by Dorling Kindersley Limited 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL Reprinted with revisions 2006 Copyright © 2005, 2006 Dorling Kindersley Limited, London A Penguin Company All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior written permission of the copyright owner. A CIP catalogue record is available from the British Library. ISBN 1 4053 1401 X ISBN 978 1 40531 401 5 The information in this e>>guide is checked annually. This guide is supported by a dedicated website which provides the very latest information for visitors to London; please see pages 6–7 for the web address and password. Some information, however, is liable to change, and the publishers cannot accept responsibility for any consequences arising from the use of this book, nor for any material on third party websites, and cannot guarantee that any website address in this book will be a suitable source of travel information. We value the views and suggestions of our readers very highly. Please write to: Publisher, DK Eyewitness Travel Guides, Dorling Kindersley, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, Great Britain. -
Synopsis of Exploring London Walks
SPELTHORNE U3AK2 “EXPLORING LONDON” WALK SYNOPSIS WALK 1 – PORTOBELLO MARKET, NOTTING HILL DISTANCE: 4 miles (with possible add on for a detour through Kensington Gardens) GETTING THERE AND BACK START: Ladbroke Grove on the Hammersmith and City Line Via Waterloo to Baker Street change to Hammersmith and City to Ladbroke Grove Or District Line from Richmond to Hammersmith and then Hammersmith and City Line to Ladbroke Grove FINISH: Notting Hill Gate or Queensway (Circle Line) to Bond Street – change to Jubilee to Waterloo ROUTE AND REFRESHMENTS The major problem on this walk is a dearth of Public Toilets, and no clear stopping place for Lunch. There is certainly no shortage of places to have Coffee or snacks, so you will have to make sure that you select a cafe that has Toilets available. The walk starts from Ladbroke Grove Station, and goes the short distance to Portobello Green where you can hopefully find Coffee+Toilet facilities. Portobello Market spreads for about 1 km going from the cheaper end to the more salubrious antique market at the top of the road. It is likely to be very crowded, and it will be much easier to have free time to wander along at your own pace, and meet at place, time suggested by the leader. Continuing to the “peak” of Notting Hill we reach the church of St. John’s which has toilets and a café (sadly only open mid week). After a downhill stretch the route continues and crosses over Holland Park Avenue before a short uphill climb to reach Campden Hill, a very select and salubrious part of Kensington where there is a reasonable pub. -
Bloomsbury Conservation Area Appraisal and Management Strategy
Bloomsbury Conservation Area Appraisal and Management Strategy Adopted 18 April 2011 i) CONTENTS PART 1: CONSERVATION AREA APPRAISAL 1.0 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................ 0 Purpose of the Appraisal ............................................................................................................ 2 Designation................................................................................................................................. 3 2.0 PLANNING POLICY CONTEXT ................................................................................................ 4 3.0 SUMMARY OF SPECIAL INTEREST........................................................................................ 5 Context and Evolution................................................................................................................ 5 Spatial Character and Views ...................................................................................................... 6 Building Typology and Form....................................................................................................... 8 Prevalent and Traditional Building Materials ............................................................................ 10 Characteristic Details................................................................................................................ 10 Landscape and Public Realm.................................................................................................. -
Drinker Solihull
Solihull & District CAMRA www.solihull.camra.org.uk Solihull Drinker Issue No 80 Free Summer 2017 Please take one Pup and Duckling - Solihull CAMRA Pub of The Year 2017 Chairman Carl Wright congratulates Jeff and Sue Berry on winning Solihull CAMRA Pub of The Year 2017 only 15 months after opening. Find out more on page 3. Reserved for SILHILL Advert Page 1 Silhill Banner Advert .pdf THE NAGS HEAD Opening hours: 5 Real Ales at all times Monday—Thursday 12—11pm Friday—Sunday 12—Midnight Henley Music Festival Meals served Friday 25th - Monday 28th August Weekdays 12—3pm & 6pm —9pm Join us for Live Music and more! Saturday 12— 9pm Food available Sunday 12— 7pm Free Entry www.thenagsheadhenley.co.uk Book our beautiful garden for your private event. Wedding or Garden Party 161 High St, Henley-in-Arden The Nags Head B95 5BA Henley In Arden Tel : 01564 793120 2 Solihull CAMRA Pub of The Year Award 2017 On Friday 4th February 2016 at 5.00pm the Pup and Duckling, and wish it, and the first paying customers arrived at the Berry family, success for the rest of the Pup and Duckling, met by an ad- the year and the foreseeable future.” mittedly nervous Jeff Berry. Jeff thanked CAMRA for their support On Wednesday 17th May 2017, after since he opened, and spoke about how around 450 different beers had been things have moved on since that nerv- sold, Solihull CAMRA arrived to present ous opening. Jeff and his family with the 2017 Pub The first year has seen a continual in- of The Year award. -
Outstanding Actions
Port Health & Environmental Services Committee – Outstanding Actions To be Officer completed/ Item Date Action Progress Update responsible progressed to next stage 1. 8 January Service Based Review Savings Director of September In January 2015, Members 2013 Programme – Public Transportation 2015 agreed that the previously Conveniences and Public proposed savings regarding the Realm provision of Public Conveniences should be reconsidered. It was agreed that the possibility of providing a non-statutory service of Public Conveniences through City’s Cash funding be investigated and details of the investigation be reported at the next appropriate Committee meeting. May 2015 Update Members agreed that the funding of the Public Convenience service was not an appropriate use for City’s Cash. In line with the SBR programme, Blackfriars, Aldgate, Bishopsgate and Smithfield toilets are now closed. The revised standardised opening times are now in place for the remaining toilets. Work is progressing for the improvement of the signage across the City and will be To be Officer completed/ Item Date Action Progress Update responsible progressed to next stage installed over the next 3-6 months due to the bespoke design of way finders. Progress is being made on the re- location of the APC from Aldermanbury to Smithfield. 2. 20 January Prudent Passage, EC2 Assistant Ongoing Prudence passage is currently 2015 Cleansing swept once a day, it has cigarette Director bins fitted and signage in place, our Street Environment Officers (SEO) patrol the area regularly and speak to smokers to encourage responsible behaviour, SEO’s issue FPNs and request ad hoc sweeps from Amey when the passage is found to heavily soiled. -
The Golden Ratio for Social Marketing
30/ 60/ 10: The Golden Ratio for Social Marketing February 2014 www.rallyverse.com @rallyverse In planning your social media content marketing strategy, what’s the right mix of content? Road Runner Stoneyford Furniture Catsfield P. O & Stores Treanors Solicitors Masterplay Leisure B. G Plating Quality Support Complete Care Services CENTRAL SECURITY Balgay Fee d Blends Bruce G Carrie Bainbridge Methodist Church S L Decorators Gomers Hotel Sue Ellis A Castle Guest House Dales Fitness Centre St. Boniface R. C Primary School Luscious C hinese Take Away Eastern Aids Support Triangle Kristine Glass Kromberg & Schubert Le Club Tricolore A Plus International Express Parcels Miss Vanity Fair Rose Heyworth Club Po lkadotfrog NPA Advertising Cockburn High School The Mosaic Room Broomhill Friery Club Metropolitan Chislehurst Motor Mowers Askrigg V. C School D. C Hunt Engineers Rod Brown E ngineering Hazara Traders Excel Ginger Gardens The Little Oyster Cafe Radio Decoding Centre Conlon Painting & Decorating Connies Coffee Shop Planet Scuba Aps Exterior Cleaning Z Fish Interpretor Czech & Slovak System Minds Morgan & Harding Red Leaf Restaurant Newton & Harrop Build G & T Frozen Foods Council on Tribunals Million Dollar Design A & D Minicoaches M. B Security Alarms & Electrical Iben Fluid Engineering Polly Howell Banco Sabadell Aquarius Water Softeners East Coast Removals Rosica Colin S. G. D Engineering Services Brackley House Aubergine 262 St. Marys College Independent Day School Arrow Vending Services Natural World Products Michael Turner Electrical Himley Cricket Club Pizz a & Kebab Hut Thirsty Work Water Coolers Concord Electrical & Plumbing Drs Lafferty T G, MacPhee W & Mcalindan Erskine Roofing Rusch Manufacturing Highland & Borders Pet Suppl ies Kevin Richens Marlynn Construction High Definition Studio A. -
Pub Token Guide
EATING OUT PUB TOKENS IN LONDON EATING OUT IN LONDON | PUB TOKENS EATING OUT IN LONDON This booklet is designed to assist you in finding a traditional English pub in central London that accepts your Pub Tokens. Before you dine, have a look at the menu’s online to find a pub which tickles your taste buds. For each hostelry we have provided you with the address, telephone number, nearest underground station and the map reference using the Visit Britain London street map provided PUB TOKENS in your welcome pack. Smartphone or tablet users can also refer to www.pubtokens.com/find-a-pub to locate the closest pub to you. In most pubs you order from the menu and pay for your meal at the bar. Some pubs may offer table service. Please ask when you enter. You have a budget of £15.00 to spend which can include a soft drink. The voucher cannot be used to purchase any alcoholic beverages. If you overspend, please use cash or a credit card to pay the balance. Remember, always check before you order your meal that they will accept your Pub Tokens. Enjoy your dinner! 2 EATING OUT IN LONDON | PUB TOKENS PUB TOKENS NAME ADDRESS POSTCODE UNDERGROUND TELEPHONE MAP Green Man 383 Euston Road, Fitzrovia NW1 3AU Great Portland Street 020 7387 6977 B6 Euston Square / King’s Royal George Eversholt Street, Euston NW1 1DG 020 7387 2431 B7 Cross The Lucas Arms 245A Grays Inn Road WC1X 8QY Kings Cross 020 7837 4340 B8 Mabel’s Tavern 9 Mabledon Place, Kings Cross WC1H 8AZ Kings Cross 020 7387 7739 B8 The Phoenix 37 Cavendish Square, Marylebone W1G 0PP Oxford Circus -
West London Pub Guide
West London Pub Guide A comprehensive guide to over 1300 pubs in the London WC, W and Middlesex areas Copyright CAMRA 2005 0 1 CONTENTS FOREWORD Foreword ............................................................................................................... 3 What you seek when you travel… Introduction ........................................................................................................... 4 …don’t you want it at home, too? How to use this guide ........................................................................................... 5 By Michael Jackson What is real ale? ................................................................................................... 8 My job is to travel the world in search of good beer. I can strongly recommend What is CAMRA? .................................................................................................. 8 the smoked beer at Ceveceria Artesanal, a brewpub in El Bolsón, Patagonia, for example. Or the spicy-tasting Okhotsk Ale from one in Kitami, Hokkaido, Japan. West London’s pub heritage ............................................................................... 10 It is, as the song says, so nice to go travelling, but oh, so nice to come home. My first stop when I do return is my local, The Andover Arms, in Hammer- Pubs ain’t what they used to be .......................................................................... 11 smith, London. I may have flown into London sleepless from some distant bar, but I can’t wait to get my tasting gear round -
A Walk from Charing Cross to St Paul's
A walk from Charing Cross to St Paul’s Updated: 24 May 2020 Length: About 2½ miles Duration: Around 2½ hours “In the 1660s London dominated England’s political and economic life and, with a population of 450,000, was the fourth largest city in the world. Early Stuart London was made up of two districts – the City of London, a crowded square mile within the City walls, surrounded by fields and heathland, and to the west the village of Charing Cross and then Westminster.” GETTING HERE The walk can start at either Charing Cross station or Embankment station. If you are arriving by bus or on foot, then I suggest you head for Charing Cross station and turn down Villiers Street, which is on the left side of the station. If you are arriving at Charing Cross tube station, then follow the signs to Charing Cross National Rail station and then take Exit 2, marked Villiers Street and turn to the right down Villiers Street. 1 Walk down Villiers Street and when you reach the end of the row of shops and restaurants on the left-hand side, turn into the narrow gateway and walk down the flight of steps and along the terraced passageway known as Watergate Walk. If you’ve arrived at the Embankment station From Embankment Station leave via the left-hand exit (not the riverside) and walk up Villiers Street. Pass the two sets of gates that lead into the Victoria Gardens. When you reach the little stand-alone snacks and sweets shop turn right through the narrow gate and walk down the steps into Watergate Walk, passing Gordon’s Wine Bar on the left.