A Stroll on Strand

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A Stroll on Strand A STROLL ON STRAND As the historic link between the City to the east and Westminster to the west and London’s financial and political hubs for almost two thousand years, Strand has always been strategically important to the Capital. At the junction of the West End and Covent Garden, Trafalgar Square, Soho and the City, Strand provides access to all that London has to offer. Famous cultural institutions from the National Gallery to the British Museum are close at hand, some of the Capital’s best restaurants and bars are on the doorstep and London’s renowned theatreland is just a short stroll away. 190 Strand is a world–class address, closely linked to the richest aspects of London living. 01 04 09 21 LOCATION FIRST CLASS ART & CULTURE & CONNECTIVITY LIVING CONTENTS 25 29 35 THEATRE FINE DINING LEARNING & CUISINE IN LONDON 39 43 49 STAYING BOUTIQUES HEALTH IN LONDON & SHOPS & BEAUTY 03 BLOOMSBURY BEDFORD SQUARE T BEDFORD SQUARE 2 EE SQUARE TR E S US HO LBORN ER H HO RT HIG CHANCERY H A IGH HO CH GREAT RUSSELL STREET LANE LBORN T O T T 11 1 HIGH HOLBORN 14 S E BEDFORD AVENUE N T 6 H CHANCERY LANE A H 8 N O A NEWMAN’S ROW LB M HOLBORN D O 19 E R R N C E V 13 N I O BLOOMSBURY WAY S W A A D U D U L IE L S C R GREAT RUSSELL STREET 11 F T N T T N R R N S I R N’ E E E L T O O E W C T A N IN T L E D R T O O F LB O N W NEW OXFORD STREET H E S N H T R LINCOLN’S INN IG KINGSWAY H E E FIELDS T 5 OXFORD STREET TOTTENHAM 25 N EWG COURT ROAD 20 1 FARRINGDON STREET A TE 18 STR S EE ELD T I OLD BAILEY F N E IN 26 ST BRIDE STREET N D S R ’ N O N B R L L O A O U C H N L GH I HI R L Y Aldgate East E R L N E A T D N C ST PAUL’S T T SOHO E E E E H M L TR E P T F SQUARE L S E A R O S GREAT QUEEN STREET AL RE I T G ST B N N N R U Y E C C E T E R R L E M E O A C E P L ’ T S R O C H S Y EA KINGSWAY Y P T A S U I 8 DE R R L E T C 1 T E A E E H D R H T T N S E 19 D S R L A YA D E H DORSET RISE C E T Aldgate UR E R T WHITEFRIARS STREET H N LUDGATE HILL R EE C TR D I S ’S 15 T L A E N E E R E L CITY U H E F T G 4 A M T 2 P BOUVERIE STREET THAMESLINK P L 10 O EA C T UL DE T N A 4 S 16 RY HA R E L L ST N U 13 REET O 20 T HILL N E CORN S S E E E 9 R 10 C E S N H V T T L U A R A S LONG ACRE R T L F 3 E C BANK G Y N H E R O W CARTER LANE S D S R O T E L I T D 9 T A A T L R T U R R B E U H D B R 16 T E E 7 R H Y D S S S E S L 18 E I E E A 29 R D T T T N 14 T H T A R F E E B G E C S N E A O R T L R E S E H W A O E S I S R M U T S T 4 COVENT GARDEN O B M S ALDWYCH T H I T A R T 3 M IC L R R V R C S E 10 8 E MI EN K D L E E T 11 E 7 E F U I S E 2 T T T I E N M 8 Q R C 2 STRAND LO T T E F G E 24 R TUDOR STREET E A E A O T R 5 T 17 D W R S R R TEMPLE G H D L I C T A 21 A L R I U R L L N 11 6 18 N H EET 23 U A I C TR 6 A N N S S 5 E S N E KE 10 N QUEEN VICTORIA STREET M F TSO 9 R U O L 22 E MANSION P D A R S LL E 6 15 ROSSWA U R E HOUSE T C N 16 C N LONG ACRE 14 L AN R E 6 E N V E 13 4 O E Y S N A 7 ST E Y T RE R COVENT S R ET T 22 8 T U E B 27 10 R S 1 GARDEN 17 E TE 12 E THE F T 12 PIAZZA T 5 A EE 3 4 1 E H R T TEMPLE S ST 7 3 BLACKFRIARS D 3 STRAND Fenchurch R GARRICK STREET 2 7 RA T CE R 5 E LA Street GE T E E P UP EE 7 TR PL PER T TR ET S 4 EM HAM AP S 2 9 E R T ES EASTCHE E 14 E TEMPLE STR L TR T VICTORIA EMBANKMENT EET IS S E BLACKFRIARS UNDERPASS L LEICESTER BEDFORD STREET X A E LANCASTER PLACE ENT G WHITCOMB STREET T KM SQUARE ET BAN RE 12 I EM A S 21 R 15 ORIA T T T T EN VIC O WE 6 M H 12 Monument R A 13 ST BLACKFRIARS BRIDGE R R 12 E E C N MILLENNIUM BRIDGE E T A T H I 4 L N N A E S D 5 Tower Hill R I LEICESTER L A I 28 A M SQUARE N N G 9 E LL C HI 11 CANNON L TOWER R OW STREET ER TH O AM 1 ES STR S RIVER THAMES EET S 3 R O A 3 8 STRAND D SOUTHWARK EA ST BRIDGE SM IT WHITCOMB STREET H H FIE T C LD 9 R A WATERLOO BRIDGE OA F T R A N P L E P G M A A K BLACKFRIARS ROAD R N E A G S B 2 Q 8 M LONDON D HAYMARKET CHARING I U E ST KATHARINE’S HOPTON STREET BRIDGE R A A CROSS I B R D R DOCK R E N O 17 A E R SAVOY T REGENT STREET T C I W S PLACE V O TRAFALGAR T SQUARE CHARING P CROSS A R K ST REET PALL MALL 5 ET TRE NOR EMBANKMENT D S W TH R 10 UMB O SUMNER STREET H E F RLAN M I D A 6 T AVE ST E NUE H HUNGERFORD BRIDGE A L L WATERLOO 23 7 S O U TH TOWER W A R K S TR BRIDGE E E T W l l Art & Culture See page 21 Staying in London See page 39 H I T T T O E l l E O H Theatre See page 25 Boutiques & Shops See page 43 E London Bridge LE A R Y T S L T S R L SOUT HWARK S H EE l l TREET T Fine Dining & Cuisine See page 29 Health & Beauty See page 49 IG Southwark H ST H T H l G O Learning In London See page 35 U M A T O S R S S N H O TR A E D B EE T Waterloo East T H M AM K ES N T E A E B Waterloo STREET UNION R M T E N S EW C E A O 04 I M UNION STREET EN G T R S T D E Y RE I O ET E A M R T Map is not to scale and shows approximate locations only R W A B T C I S S H R V S E N E N O R W R A O O F C B T A D L T E E R E C R R U B C T IF E I S S X NO L WS R A M FIE N LD E H S M Q A U G O R I E E S F H N N A H E D I A H R L I T L S S Z EE D G R S E T A ST K A E U R B C Y E CO G A E PO R O O E T R S H E T R R A O T S T A R T E O S D R E U G B E F E T E F O T D O I T O L R L K E B S Y T S R K T E R E R E T A E T LO W NG LANE H T Borough Westminster U WESTMINSTER O S BRIDGE L EAT HE RMA RKE T S TRE ET CONNECTIVITY Camden Town King’s Cross St.Pancras International Euston Paddington Baker Street Angel Old Street Farringdon Moorgate Tottenham Court Road Liverpool Street Bond Street Oxford Circus Holborn Canary Wharf Shepherd’s Bush Notting Hill Gate Aldgate Bank Green Park Leicester Square Piccadilly Circus Cannon Street Monument Tower Hill Charing Cross Blackfriars London Bridge Earl’s Court South Kensington Victoria Embankment Temple West Brompton Waterloo Fulham Broadway Central Line Piccadilly Line Northern Line Victoria Line Circle Line 190 Strand is excellently located with District Line connection by rail and tube to all parts Crossrail (opening 2018) of the capital on it’s doorstep.
Recommended publications
  • Prime Bloomsbury Freehold Development Opportunity LONDON
    BLOOMSBURY LONDON WC2 LONDON WC2 Prime Bloomsbury Freehold Development Opportunity BLOOMSBURY LONDON WC2 INVESTMENT SUMMARY • Prime Bloomsbury location between Shaftesbury Avenue and High Holborn, immediately to the north of Covent Garden. • Attractive period building arranged over lower ground, ground and three upper floors totalling 10,442 sq ft (970.0 sq m) Gross Internal Area. • The property benefits from detailed planning permission, subject to a Section 106 agreement, for change of use and erection of a roof extension to six residential apartments (C3 use) comprising 6,339 sq ft (589.0 sq m) Net Saleable Area and four B1/A1 units totalling 2,745 sq ft (255.0 sq m) Gross Internal Area, providing a total Gross Internal Area of 12,080 sq ft (1,122.2 sq m). • The property will be sold with vacant possession. • The building would be suitable for owner occupiers, developers or investors seeking to undertake an office refurbishment and extension, subject to planning. • Freehold. • The vendor is seeking offers in excess of £8,750,000 (Eight Million, Seven Hundred and Fifty Thousand Pounds) subject to contract and exclusive of VAT, which equates to £838 per sq ft on the existing Gross Internal Area and £724 per sq ft on the consented Gross Internal Area. BLOOMSBURY LONDON WC2 LOCATION The thriving Bloomsbury sub-market sits between Soho to the west, Covent Garden to the south and Fitzrovia to the north. The local area is internationally known for its unrivalled amenities with the restaurants and bars of Soho and theatres and retail provision of Covent Garden a short walk away.
    [Show full text]
  • Accommodation Guide 2013–2014
    ACCOMMODATION GUIDE 2013–2014 www.arts.ac.uk/housing Contents The Costume 15 Store Furzedown Student Halls 17 Village Welcome from the Vice Chancellor and 3 Accommodation team Glassyard 19 Building Woodland 23 Court What you need to know 5 Brooke Hall Manna 25 Ash 27 House Bernard Coming to live in Myers 7 the UK from overseas 29 House Camberwell 31Campus Will Wyatt 33 Court Don Gratton Cordwainers The Social Programme 35 House 37 Court How to Apply, 9 11Step by Step Private rental Designer 39 advice and 41 Credits 13 Tenancy rates and Map UNIVERSITY OF THE ARTS LONDON www.arts.ac.uk/housing . T: +44 (0)20 7514 6240 3 4 If you’ve accepted your place at University of the Arts London, you need to begin thinking about where you are going to live when you arrive. If you are already studying with us, don’t forget that all students in every year of study are welcome in our halls of residence. On behalf of University of the Arts At the Accommodation Services office we are here to London, I would like to welcome provide you with a clean, safe home in London. you to our halls of residence. Halls of residence are places to relax, study, create and make friends. They are a place of your own where you Nigel Carrington never need to feel alone because you are always part of Vice-Chancellor our community. For 2013/14 we have 12 halls of residence across London which provide a home for around 3,000 students.
    [Show full text]
  • Buses from Holborn Circus and Chancery Lane BRIXTON
    HOLLOWAY ILFORD KENTISH HACKNEY TOWN ISLINGTON SHOREDITCH BETHNAL GREEN Buses from Holborn Circus and Chancery Lane BRIXTON 24 hour Northumberland Park 341 service 17 Tesco and IKEA Key continues to Maida Vale Archway Northumberland Park N8 Hall Road Hainault 8 Day buses in black The Lowe Lansdowne Road St JohnÕs Wood 24 hour N8 Night buses in blue Swiss Cottage Upper Holloway 25 service Wanstead Ilford Bruce Grove Hainault Street —O Connections with London Underground Warwick Avenue FitzjohnÕs Avenue HOLLOWAY o Connections with London Overground Holloway Tottenham Leytonstone Ilford Hampstead NagÕs Head Police Station Green Man 24 hour R Connections with National Rail West Green Road 242 service ILFORD Paddington Caledonian Road Homerton Hospital BishopÕs Bridge Road Philip Lane Leytonstone Manor Park DI Connections with Docklands Light Railway Harringay Green Lanes Broadway Clapton Park B Royal Free Hospital Caledonian Road & Barnsbury Connections with river boats Lancaster Gate Manor House Millfields Road Woodgrange 46 Leytonstone Park I Mondays to Fridays only Hackney Downs Hampstead Heath Green Lanes High Road South End Green Caledonian Road Forest Gate Copenhagen Street Lordship Park Newington Green Hackney Central Maryland Princess Alice Kentish Town West Caledonian Road Stratford Carnegie Street Newington Green Road Graham Road Balls Pond Road Bus Station KENTISH Kentish Town Road HACKNEY Essex Road Caledonian Road Stratford High Street Killick Street Dalston Junction TOWN Royal Camden Road Essex Road Old Ford College Pancras
    [Show full text]
  • Architectural Digest May Earn a Portion of Sales from Products That Are Purchased Through Our Site As Part of Our Affiliate Partnerships with Retailers
    The Grecian Valley at Stowe, Buckinghamshire (showing the Temple of Victory and Concorde), this year's beneficiary of the Royal Oak Foundation's gala dinner. Photo: Andrew Butler, courtesy of the National Trust THE REPORT The Royal Oak Foundation Looks to Stowe's 1730s Temple of Modern Virtue as its Latest Beneficiary The William Kent structure will benefit from the proceeds of the organization's annual Timeless Design Dinner By Mitchell Owens October 16, 2018 Stowe, the English country estate that shares its land with an elite boarding school, is a name that galvanizes attention in the architecture world. The sprawling Buckinghamshire destination, administered by the National Trust, astounds with the richness and variety of a property that was augmented, enriched, and, indeed, reshaped by an all-star 18th- century cast hired by the aristocratic Temple family: Charles Bridgeman, Sir John Vanbrugh, James Gibbs, William Kent, John Michael Rysbrack, and Lancelot “Capability” Brown, who was then just starting out on a career that would result in England’s transformation from stiff formal gardens to rolling landscapes that look utterly natural—but actually aren’t. “There’s so much going on at Stowe,” says David Nathans, the president of the Royal Oak Foundation, the energetic American fundraising arm of the National Trust. By that he means not only plants, trees, lakes, and the earthly like but scores of monuments, follies, temples, bridges, and other architectural delights that the public can see 365 days a year. Among them is what’s left of the 1730s Temple of Modern Virtue, a William Kent limestone frivolity that was built as a fool-the-eye ruin—it was intended as sarcastic commentary on Sir Robert Walpole, the avaricious British prime minister, who is depicted as a headless torso—but which has become, literally, tumble-down.
    [Show full text]
  • The Gibbs Range of Classical Porches • the Gibbs Range of Classical Porches •
    THE GIBBS RANGE OF CLASSICAL PORCHES • THE GIBBS RANGE OF CLASSICAL PORCHES • Andrew Smith – Senior Buyer C G Fry & Son Ltd. HADDONSTONE is a well-known reputable company and C G Fry & Son, award- winning house builder, has used their cast stone architectural detailing at a number of our South West developments over the last ten years. We erected the GIBBS Classical Porch at Tregunnel Hill in Newquay and use HADDONSTONE because of the consistency, product, price and service. Calder Loth, Senior Architectural Historian, Virginia Department of Historic Resources, USA As an advocate of architectural literacy, it is gratifying to have Haddonstone’s informative brochure defining the basic components of literate classical porches. Hugh Petter’s cogent illustrations and analysis of the porches’ proportional systems make a complex subject easily grasped. A porch celebrates an entrance; it should be well mannered. James Gibbs’s versions of the classical orders are the appropriate choice. They are subtlety beautiful, quintessentially English, and fitting for America. Jeremy Musson, English author, editor and presenter Haddonstone’s new Gibbs range is the result of an imaginative collaboration with architect Hugh Petter and draws on the elegant models provided by James Gibbs, one of the most enterprising design heroes of the Georgian age. The result is a series of Doric and Ionic porches with a subtle variety of treatments which can be carefully adapted to bring elegance and dignity to houses old and new. www.haddonstone.com www.adamarchitecture.com 2 • THE GIBBS RANGE OF CLASSICAL PORCHES • Introduction The GIBBS Range of Classical Porches is designed The GIBBS Range is conceived around the two by Hugh Petter, Director of ADAM Architecture oldest and most widely used Orders - the Doric and and inspired by the Georgian architect James Ionic.
    [Show full text]
  • St James Conservation Area Audit
    ST JAMES’S 17 CONSERVATION AREA AUDIT AREA CONSERVATION Document Title: St James Conservation Area Audit Status: Adopted Supplementary Planning Guidance Document ID No.: 2471 This report is based on a draft prepared by B D P. Following a consultation programme undertaken by the council it was adopted as Supplementary Planning Guidance by the Cabinet Member for City Development on 27 November 2002. Published December 2002 © Westminster City Council Department of Planning & Transportation, Development Planning Services, City Hall, 64 Victoria Street, London SW1E 6QP www.westminster.gov.uk PREFACE Since the designation of the first conservation areas in 1967 the City Council has undertaken a comprehensive programme of conservation area designation, extensions and policy development. There are now 53 conservation areas in Westminster, covering 76% of the City. These conservation areas are the subject of detailed policies in the Unitary Development Plan and in Supplementary Planning Guidance. In addition to the basic activity of designation and the formulation of general policy, the City Council is required to undertake conservation area appraisals and to devise local policies in order to protect the unique character of each area. Although this process was first undertaken with the various designation reports, more recent national guidance (as found in Planning Policy Guidance Note 15 and the English Heritage Conservation Area Practice and Conservation Area Appraisal documents) requires detailed appraisals of each conservation area in the form of formally approved and published documents. This enhanced process involves the review of original designation procedures and boundaries; analysis of historical development; identification of all listed buildings and those unlisted buildings making a positive contribution to an area; and the identification and description of key townscape features, including street patterns, trees, open spaces and building types.
    [Show full text]
  • 70 Jermyn Street
    70 Jermyn Street London SW1 3rd Floor Bury Street Suite Partially fitted 1,709 sq ft 70 Jermyn Street The Crown Estate has refurbished Jermyn Street is within local proximity the 3rd floor suite within this to the West End with its world class hotels, restaurants, bars and theatres grade A office building. The suite for entertaining clients. overlooks the corner of Bury Street and Jermyn Street. Third floor Jermyn Street 1,709 sq ft / 159 sq m Outgoings Quoting rent £72.50 psf for lease to expire January 2022 Service charge £11.60 psf Rates £29.20 psf Specifications Bury Street Manned reception Passenger lift New LED lighting Air conditioning New perimeter trunking N Kitchenette Comms cabinet Cabling in situ At the forefront of office accommodation. Since 1661. St James’s St James’s is a true original more than The restaurants here are the best, Located in the core West End, Green Park, 300 years in the making, a one of a kind whether you are looking to pick up a Piccadilly Circus, Charing Cross and Victoria place to work and enjoy. morning coffee at Ole & Steen or entertain are all within easy reach. Alternatively clients at Michelin-starred Aquavit. If you take a walk to work through the beautifully We know that your exceptional business have a taste for the refined, the unusual landscaped parks and squares. needs an iconic home that provides and the bespoke, you can find it in the inspiring places to dine, to shop, and to You’ll soon discover there is simply nowhere shops of St James’s – from rare wines create, and that is what every location else like St James’s.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction-Translation-As-Art-History.Pdf
    SUGATA RAY INTRODUCTION Translation as Art History In September 2016, more than two thousand scholars from forty- three countries gathered at the Comité International d’Histoire de l’Art’s Thirty- fourth World Congress of Art History in Beijing to collectively consider the terms that shape art history’s disciplinary contours in dispersed parts of the globe.1 The concern could not have been more pressing. As the call to decolonize the museum and the university gains momentum, the need to revisit the lan- guage of art history—terminologies, schemas, vocabularies, and so on— also accrues urgency, for lexica and terminologies frame the boundaries of what can and what cannot be called art history. Terms, as Raymond Williams reminds us, institutionalize knowledge through the manipulation of signification within language.2 Indeed, by now, we are all too cognizant of the threads that link the disciplinary structures of modern art history with both the project of the European Enlightenment and the epistemic violence of colonialism. The eighteenth- and nineteenth- century roots of the discipline, scholars have noted, lay in the “colonization of the world’s cultures” through a “totalizing notion of art.”3 More recently, in the wake of the Occupy movement, activists and community groups also have engaged with the colonial legacy of art history’s disciplinary paradigms. Consider, for instance, the demand to set up a Decolonization Commission at the Brooklyn Museum. That this call to decolonize the museum evokes a scene from the 2018 film Black Panther
    [Show full text]
  • Best Luxury Hotels in London in 2019
    3/29/2019 Best Luxury Hotels in London in 2019 ARTICL Indagare Memer’ Favorite London Hotel Contact U To tart A Trip Rosewood London The Hamyard Hotel London It’s no surprise that London is one of Indagare’s all­time­favorite destinations. An AUTHOR accessible, crowd­pleasing trip for families, couples and groups, the European stalwart has a way of luring travelers back time and time again—in part due to its seemingly endless supply of new restaurants and shops and its impressive roster of luxury hotels. Read on for our members’ most beloved London properties, which masterfully blend tradition with modernity. Contact Indagare for assistance planning a trip to London. Our specialists can book you at the property that is right for you, plan seamless travel transfers and arrange great Avery Carmichael activities, meals and special experiences. COLUMN The erkele Matchmaker INTRT Culinary Culture Family Romance Style Urban Wellness RLATD HOTL The Berkeley London https://www.indagare.com/destinations/europe/england/london/articles/the-top-15-indagares-most-booked-london-hotels? 1/7 3/29/2019 Best Luxury Hotels in London in 2019 With its convenient Knightsbridge location and laid­back yet elegant aesthetic, The Berkeley marries impeccable service with contemporary rooms. The Berkeley does not prize fuss or fanfare, but rather, discreet attention to detail and luxe comforts. Best For: Families, couples and single travelers in search of a relaxed but high­touch ethos and aesthetic. Summer travelers will appreciate The Berkeley’s rooftop pool. rown’ Related: Best Afternoon Teas in London History meets hip Claridge’ Claridge’ Grande dame, buzzing scene, timeless classic Claridge’s London Hamarket Hotel Hot spot, color riot, boutique The glitzy grande dame of the city, Claridge’s is most well­known for its buzzy, see­and­ be­seen lobby and its decadent high tea.
    [Show full text]
  • A London Legend Reborn a London Legend Reborn
    A London Legend Reborn A London Legend Reborn True to its original glamorous spirit, Café Royal is reopening as a luxury hotel in 2012 in the heart of London, with elegant Mayfair to the west and creative Soho to the east. Paying homage to the history of the building, grand historic areas are being sensitively restored, while serene new rooms and suites are being created in a refined style. Café Royal, which has been a national treasure for almost two centuries, is continuing its celebrated legacy and features a diversity of places to enjoy food and drink, from the casual elegance of The Brasserie to the sophistication of the exquisitely restored Domino and Grill Rooms. To complete the full experience, other new facilities include the Akasha Holistic Wellbeing Centre, the Café Royal Club and the Café 1865. Location The serene new rooms and suites have The Café Royal is ideally located on been created in a contemporary style Regent Street, in the beating heart of the characterised by a refined simplicity with West End. To the west are the glamorous grand classical features in noble materials. residences and elegant boutiques of Mayfair. To the east are Soho’s lattice The overall effect of the hotel’s 159 guest of alleys and streets, which define the rooms and suites, including six ‘historic’ nightlife and encompass the cosmopolitan suites reminiscent of Café Royal’s glorious restaurants. Also right on its doorstep is past, is calm, assured and distinctive. the famous shopping of Bond Street, Mount Street and Jermyn Street. Below Piccadilly Accommodation are the exclusive clubs and art galleries The suites and rooms have an original and of historic St James’ with Westminster graceful air, carefully designed for guests’ and Buckingham Palace just beyond.
    [Show full text]
  • Central London Bus and Walking Map Key Bus Routes in Central London
    General A3 Leaflet v2 23/07/2015 10:49 Page 1 Transport for London Central London bus and walking map Key bus routes in central London Stoke West 139 24 C2 390 43 Hampstead to Hampstead Heath to Parliament to Archway to Newington Ways to pay 23 Hill Fields Friern 73 Westbourne Barnet Newington Kentish Green Dalston Clapton Park Abbey Road Camden Lock Pond Market Town York Way Junction The Zoo Agar Grove Caledonian Buses do not accept cash. Please use Road Mildmay Hackney 38 Camden Park Central your contactless debit or credit card Ladbroke Grove ZSL Camden Town Road SainsburyÕs LordÕs Cricket London Ground Zoo Essex Road or Oyster. Contactless is the same fare Lisson Grove Albany Street for The Zoo Mornington 274 Islington Angel as Oyster. Ladbroke Grove Sherlock London Holmes RegentÕs Park Crescent Canal Museum Museum You can top up your Oyster pay as Westbourne Grove Madame St John KingÕs TussaudÕs Street Bethnal 8 to Bow you go credit or buy Travelcards and Euston Cross SadlerÕs Wells Old Street Church 205 Telecom Theatre Green bus & tram passes at around 4,000 Marylebone Tower 14 Charles Dickens Old Ford Paddington Museum shops across London. For the locations Great Warren Street 10 Barbican Shoreditch 453 74 Baker Street and and Euston Square St Pancras Portland International 59 Centre High Street of these, please visit Gloucester Place Street Edgware Road Moorgate 11 PollockÕs 188 TheobaldÕs 23 tfl.gov.uk/ticketstopfinder Toy Museum 159 Russell Road Marble Museum Goodge Street Square For live travel updates, follow us on Arch British
    [Show full text]
  • Hexagon-Apartments-Brochure.Pdf
    A contemporary collection of brand new, luxury residences in the heart of London’s Covent Garden, comprising 15 floors of outstanding one, two and three bedroom apartments and penthouses. An iconic building rising far above the neighbouring rooftops, designed by world-renowned architects Squire & Partners, with interior specification by leading designers Michaelis Boyd. Residents will benefit from a tailored concierge service by Qube, that will offer a full range of lifestyle management options for a seamless living experience. HEXAGON APARTMENTS PENTHOUSE VIEW SIX UNRIVALLED VIEWS, ONE REMARKABLE BUILDING Uninterrupted views of Prime Central London’s distinguished skyline, protected through 360° by the surrounding Seven Dials Conservation Area. 2 3 HEXAGON APARTMENTS EXCEPTIONAL INTERIORS Each residence at Hexagon Apartments has been crafted to a contemporary design finish, by interiors specialists Michaelis Boyd, that resonates with the building’s arresting architectural style. Exposed structural columns, polished concrete kitchen surfaces and delicate metal-framed internal glazing complement the geometric form of the tower, and perfectly balance luxury details such as chevron timber flooring and bespoke joinery. Floor-to-ceiling windows inside each apartment create beautiful and light-filled living spaces. 4 5 HEXAGON APARTMENTS EXCEPTIONAL INTERIORS 6 7 HEXAGON APARTMENTS PENTHOUSE TERRACES 8 9 HEXAGON APARTMENTS THE LONDON LANDMARKS The Hexagon Apartments are located at the heart of London’s Covent Garden, in close proximity to the
    [Show full text]