We discovered the city with a low budget, but 5 days weren’t enough for all the sightseeing we were willing to have. Nevertheless, London is quite an expensive city and a lot of money went for entrances at different objectives.
We slept at Normandie Hotel, located on Sussex Garden Street, very close to Hyde Park and Paddington Station. For minimum 5 days, it’s really helpful to buy an Oyster Card (23 pounds) for one week for all the public transportation. One way ticket is 4 pounds!
To save money for all the entrances, look for London passes that offers you from one day till three days free entrance at every touristic objective, except Madame Tussauds and Westminster Abbey. Not to mention that with this card you have deductions at several nice restaurants, especially in Soho.
HOT
Tower of London
Not a really pleasant place if you start thinking at what happened inside those walls, but still. The White Tower, the Crown Jewels, Prisoners Exhibition and Henry VIII – Dressed to Kill room are definitely things to see inside the tower. At the entrance, you will be “welcomed” by ravens. Legend says that the kingdom and the Tower will fall if the six resident ravens ever leave the fortress.
Boat Cruise on the Thames River
You can embark from the Parliament, go to Greenwich and stand on the Meridian line like all the 9 million visitors. From the boat you can see many attractions of London, and decide which of them you want to visit or not. The cruise has an “audio guide crew member” that will repeat over and over that he is not paid to do this, so some gratitude from your side is welcome! We were short on money, but we were very grateful inside. After all, he is mentioned here…
Tower Bridge
Go inside and climb up with the elevator. You will have a fantastic panoramic view of the city. It’s a must see bridge at night also.
St Paul’s Cathedral
I’m not a big cathedrals fan to visit them during my holiday, but this one is really worth it. If your feet are strong enough at that moment of the day you visit the cathedral, you should climb up the stairs ( 500 ) to the Whispering Gallery and the Clock Tower.
Westminster Abbey
If you don’t know how a 700 years old chair looks like, that’s the place to go. Not to mention that it’s King Edward's Chair, the throne on which British sovereigns are seated at the moment of coronation. You shouldn’t miss inside the Abbey the Poets’ Corner, The Lady Chapel, the Little Cloister and The Nave.
National Geographic store on Regent Street
Great pictures, good café, photo albums and much much more.
Hyde Park
One of the largest parks in central London and one of the Royal Parks of London, famous for its Speakers' Corner, Diana Princess of Wales memorial ( an oval stone ring fountain ) and the Upside-down Tree. If you have a need to relax on the grass and drink a beer after a whole day of sightseeing, this is the place to go.
Camden Market
Open-air and indoor markets, each with its own distinctive flavor, line a street of shops, bars and restaurants. It was mentioned somewhere that "...the most interesting people in the world go to Camden Market, London; home of alternative fashion and design..."
Covent Garden
The only part of London licensed for street entertainment with performers having to undertake auditions for the Market's management and representatives of the performers' union and signing up to timetabled slots.
It’s place with a lot of pubs, open-air cafes, restaurants and a nice market. You will have fun there, especially if one of the performers will invite you to join his “act”! It happens …. Trust me!
House of Parliament / Big Ben
Better go there in the evening when the building and the clock to see them light up from the other side of the Thames River
Buckingham Palace
The most interesting thing to see, it’s not the changing of the guards, but the five guards of United Kingdom march towards the palace. The Grenadiers, Coldstream Guards, Scots Guards, Irish Guards and the Welsh Guards. In front of the palace, is St James’s Park ( famous for his hungry nuts squirrels )
Fabric
If you are into house music, Fabric is the club to go to. Three rooms, minimum 4 DJ’s in each room, sound coming from the ceiling, bass coming from the floor. Normal entrance fee is 16 pounds, but you can get an entrance from the “streets” with 10 pounds. You will gain a beer baby!
NOT
Madame Tussauds
Waiting at the queue, pay 25 pounds and see some wax figures … Don’t do it. For this amount of money you can go to Winsdor Castle and see the grave of Henry VIII. It’s definitely a regret we didn’t ménage to arrive to that beautiful castle situated at 30 miles from London.
Harrods
Huge store, mostly with Egyptian architecture. You will lose precious hours if you enter the store, and anyway you will exit empty handed.
Trafalgar Square
It’s a square … with a monument in the middle :) Not cool ...
Piccadilly Circus
Famous for his video commercials displayed on one of the buildings at the junction. You can use like a meeting point with your friends. You will find it very easy.
London Eye
17 pounds. What you get: a cabin with plenty of other tourists, may be a place at the window, half an hour for one complete rotation and of course a short period of time being at the top. Yey!
We didn’t realize yet were the british folks are employed in London – not in restaurants, driving buses, hotels, stores, etc.
London is an animated city with active people, many tourists and a lot of day & night attractions that can keep you awake for 24 hours. For sure, it's a city that shouldn't be missed!
Among all the cities i've seen so far, i place London as the 2nd most interesting city in Europe.