This was published 1 year ago
20 things that will surprise first-time visitors to London
By David Whitley
One of the most popular tourist destinations on the planet can still hold a few surprises for first timers.
The food's great
Well, OK, not all the food's great, and much of it is on the mediocre to terrible trajectory. But there's probably nowhere else on earth where you can eat such a variety of good food. London's melting pot tendencies bring in people – and cuisines – from all over the world, meaning you can go from Filipino or Sudanese one night to Jamaican or Sri Lankan the next.
The museums are free
London has a reputation as an expensive city, but so many of its top tourist attractions are free to enter. The British Museum is the big one, but the free museum entry policy stretches to several that are world class, including the V&A, Natural History Museum, Science Museum, Tate Modern and National Gallery.
There's little laurel-resting
Some of the big hitters could just get away with letting visitors traipse through, looking at the collection. But surprising levels of effort go into them. The British Museum, for example, has free niche-focused tours, while the Tower of London has wire-frame sculptures in the courtyards and a series of micro-exhibitions on unexpected topics such as the animals once kept in the Tower.
It's disjointed
London is a somewhat incoherent hodgepodge of 32 boroughs, plus the City of London, all of which have different local authorities. This can lead to street signs looking different one block to the next, and strongly different personalities from area to area. This is a good thing, however – hipster Hackney Wick, leafy Richmond-upon-Thames and posh Kensington and Chelsea give agreeably different experiences.
It is pretty low rise
London has some striking tall buildings, notably newcomers the Shard and the Gherkin plus old-timer St Paul's Cathedral. But on the whole, this is not a city built upwards. Don't expect the claustrophobic intensity of New York or skyscraper-scape of Hong Kong.
The King – theoretically – lives there
King Charles hasn’t yet moved into Buckingham Palace, largely due to renovation works. But traditionally the monarch does live there apart from a 10-week summer break. So, if you want to have a snoop around Buckingham Palace, you’ll have to do so from mid-July to the end of September. Snooping tourists aren’t allowed in for the rest of the year. Being able to visit at all is a relatively new thing.
It takes about an hour
Even with the new Elizabeth Line cutting cross-city journey times, it is somehow an eternal truth that no matter how far away two points of interest are, or how close they are, it will take roughly an hour to get between them. Once you factor in walking to the tube station, waiting for the train, getting the train and walking from the tube station, it's about an hour. Your hotel to Buckingham Palace? About an hour. Just accept it.
Sometimes bus is best
Occasionally, the tube lines don't work out the way you want them to. But instead of going to the faff of changing lines multiple times, it's worth checking whether there's a bus going your way – often there's one that'll drop you right outside the door. The journey planner at tfl.gov.uk is your friend.
The pub lives on
The Great British Pub is something usually associated with the countryside, but even in the most touristy areas of London, there are good, old-fashioned boozers that have resisted the tide of hipster bars to sell warm pints amid decor that hasn’t changed in decades. Some have bowed to serving craft beer and food, but others, like Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese in Fleet Street, are still delightfully commonplace.
It's walkable
OK, so you're going to need public transport at some point, but much of London is eminently walkable and best explored on two feet. This, plus the sheer amount of history and quirky oddities, makes it one of the best places on earth for walking tours. London Walks runs an incredible array of themed walks, with topics such as Shakespeare and Dickens, Harry Potter and Jack the Ripper.
The theatres are uncomfortable
London’s Theatreland stretches well beyond the West End musicals it’s famous for. Every night (except Sundays when most productions close down), there are scores of productions – some camp, some serious, some funny – to choose from. But while the theatres may be dolled up, they’re not designed for comfort. Expect cramped seats that would make even the nastiest budget airline blush.
There are two Abbey Roads
Tourists wanting to recreate the cover of the Beatles’ Abbey Road album are among the most perplexing phenomena in London, as well as being the bane of local motorists. Entertainingly, though, there’s more than one Abbey Road. You’ll be wanting the one in NW8, near the St John’s Wood tube station.
Sunday hotels are bargains
The lack of Sunday shows and business travellers means that hotel rates can plummet on Sunday nights. Searching for rooms in October, the Novotel London Tower Bridge had rooms for £149 on the Sunday night. On the following Monday night, the rate shot up to £203.
It's best by boat
The River Thames is hardly Sydney Harbour, but many of London's top sights line up along its curves. The London Eye, Palace of Westminster, Battersea Power Station and Tower of London are among them, and several cruise lines operate. But the Uber Boat by Thames Clippers ferry services, operating six routes between 24 piers along the river, are the cheap way of doing it.
It's safe
Despite extremely dubious far-right propaganda gaining remarkable traction overseas, there aren’t any genuine no-go areas in London. By international standards, it’s a remarkably safe city, and while there is some crime, visitors generally don’t have to take any precautions they wouldn’t take in a big Australian city.
Oxford Street is hell
Oxford Street might be London's best-known shopping street, but it really lacks personality and is usually far too crowded. While the department stores are worth a look, most are repeated all over the country, and everything else is chain stores and legally suspect American candy shops. Camden, Portobello Road, Carnaby Street and the Kings Road have much more interesting options.
There’s life beyond zone 1
Sure, most of London’s big attractions are within zone 1 of the tube map, but many aren’t – and are worth heading further afield for. These include the Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew, Henry VIII’s home at Hampton Court Palace, plus the sporting museums at the Twickenham rugby stadium and Wimbledon tennis club.
Greenwich is great
If picking one off-centre area to hang out in for the day, make it Greenwich, which is packed with interesting oddities. Budding seafarers will love the National Maritime Museum while posh-building lovers can wander around the Old Royal Naval College or the magnificently Palladian Queen's House. Best of all is the Royal Observatory, where you can stand straddling the eastern and western hemispheres across the Greenwich meridian.
You don't need Oyster cards
The Oyster card was a great innovation at the time – a tap-in, tap-out system for accessing public transport that did away with the need to buy individual tickets and passes. You can still buy it, but the system’s even smoother now – you can tap in and tap out with your credit or debit card instead.
The airports don't link
London's airports – Heathrow, Gatwick, City, Stansted and Luton – are a long way from each other, and act as if the others don't exist. Transport connections between them are abysmal, too, despite several airlines flying from more than one. Check connections carefully to ensure you don't need an expensive nightmare dash across the city.
The writer has travelled as a guest of Visit Britain.
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