iVisit.... the Serpentine in Hyde Park
Fancy a lazy afternoon? How about a picnic by the Serpentine in Hyde Park.
https://www.royalparks.org.uk/parks/hyde-park
Fancy a lazy afternoon? How about a picnic by the Serpentine in Hyde Park.
https://www.royalparks.org.uk/parks/hyde-park
Get on your bike and follow one of London’s best off road cycling routes.
http://www.visitleevalley.org.uk/en/content/cms/outdoors/cycling/suggested-routes/
Its steeply raked auditorium is one of the largest in London with 1,250 seats, yet those who attend say it is one of the most intimate.
One of the most central leisure centres in London, the Oasis.
Do your shopping in near by Covent Garden and then have a refreshing dip in the outside pool, all of 27 metres, on the roof.
If the weathers fine why not take a trip on the London Waterbus? In the summer, the Waterbuses cruise the Regent’s Canal in between Little Venice and Camden.
It’s Saturday morning and you’re after a foodie adventure… Why not head down to one of London’s best kept foodie secrets, Rope Walk in Bermondsey.(on Maltby St.)
Watch the London sunrise on Primrose Hill.
Every year millions of Londoners and tourists visit St James's Park, the oldest of the capital's eight Royal Parks.
https://www.royalparks.org.uk/parks/st-jamess-park
With varied eating and drinking spaces, welcoming service and all-day flexibility, Bourne & Hollingsworth Buildings offers a creative hub for all those who enjoy the brand’s signature style, day and night.
Steeped in heritage and truly unique, St. Katharine Docks are home to a collection of high-quality offices, restaurants and bars. St. Katharine Dock's has evolved and diversified time and time again during its long history. The Docks are built on a site with over 1000 years history.
In May 1999, His Holiness the Dalai Lama opened and consecrated the Tibetan Peace Garden next to the Imperial War Museum, London, UK. The Peace Garden was commissioned by Tibet Foundation and built on land kindly provided by Southwark Council.
Hyde Park has a fleet of rowing and pedal boats which operate on the famous Serpentine and the UK's first Solarshuttle, a magnificent vessel which glides silently across the lake powered only by the sun.
Queen Mary's Garden is a world-famous garden named after the wife of King George V. in 1932 when Queen Mary's Gardens opened to the general public, the first superintendent planted a rose garden which was completed in 1934
The Chelsea Physic Garden was founded in 1673, as the Apothecaries’ Garden, with the purpose of training apprentices in identifying plants.
York House, dating back to the 17th Century, forms part of the present day civic offices of the London Borough of Richmond.
Rated as one of the best flower shops in London!
The Phoenix Garden is a community garden and registered charity, managed by volunteers, created to provide a green retreat from the stresses of London's West End and a vital habitat for urban wildlife.
Open-air swimming is internationally famous on Hampstead Heath with the Ladies' Pond, the Men's Pond, the Mixed Pond and the Parliament Hill Lido.
The Crystal Palace Park is English Heritage Grade II listed and located within the London Borough of Bromley and on the boundary of the London Boroughs of Croydon, Lambeth, Lewisham and Southwark.
Highgate Cemetery has some of the finest funerary architecture in England. It is a place of peace and contemplation where a romantic profusion of trees, memorials and wildlife flourish.
The Isabella Plantation is a 40 acre woodland garden set within a Victorian woodland plantation planted in the 1830's. First opened to the public in 1953, it is best known for its evergreen azaleas, which line the ponds and streams and at their peak of flower in late April and early May.
Holland Park is spread across 54 acres of what used to be the grounds of Cope Castle, a large Jacobean mansion hidden in the woods. It was built by Sir Walter Cope in the early 17th century, who became Chancellor of the Exchequer under King James 1. It was renamed Holland House after the Earl of Holland’s wife Lady Rich inherited the property.
The Roof Gardens are spectacular and best of all, they're open to the public to visit free of charge. The Roof Gardens were the dream of Trevor Bowen, the vice president of John Barker & Co. In 1936 he employed landscape architect Ralph Hancock to realise his vision. The gardens took two years to build at a cost of £25,000 and opened to the public in May 1938.
Every year millions of Londoners and tourists visit The Green Park, the smallest of the capital's eight Royal Parks.
Brockwell Lido - your first choice for the whole family to stay fit and active in in south London.
Victoria Tower Gardens, officially opened in 1914, lies at the heart of Westminster, bordered by the Houses of Parliament, the River Thames, Millbank and Lambeth Bridge.
Every year millions of Londoners and tourists visit Bushy Park, the second largest of the capital's eight Royal Parks.
Free Tours by Foot offer name-your-own-price London walking tours. They provide a platform for professional, freelance tour guides to lead walking as well as food and bike tours at no upfront cost, so that you may enjoy a quality sightseeing experience no matter what your budget.
Experts consider Kew’s Palm House to be the most important surviving Victorian iron and glass structure in the world. It was designed by Decimus Burton and engineered by Richard Turner to accommodate the exotic palms being collected and introduced to Europe in early Victorian times.
Located in the heart of London’s Docklands at the west end of Millwall outer dock, the Centre is based in an award winning purpose built facility with great views from the upstairs bar over the dock, and wet facilities downstairs.