Best Areas to Stay in While Visiting London
Find out what some of the best areas to stay in while visiting London are (in my opinion). Make sure you're booking your accommodation in an area that's safe and interesting, by choosing to stay in one of these London neighborhoods.
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Best places to visit
Best places to visit - Brackley (United Kingdom) Best places to visit - Slideshows from all over the world - City trips, nature pictures, etc.
Tour of West Hampstead, London NW6
Tour of West Hampstead, London NW6
A video walking tour of West Hampstead, London NW6, starting from its Southern end and going up West End Lane towards the Northern part of this pretty North London area.
This video features:
- West End Lane NW6
- Acol Bridge Club & Academy
- Sherriff Road
- Stephen Fry's old house on Sherriff Rd
- The Sherriff Centre, Sanctuary Cafe & West Hampstead Post Office
- West Hampstead Studios
- Detour down Broadhurst Gardens to see The English National Opera (ENO) rehearsal building where Decca Studios used to be (famous for being the music studio where many big name musicians recorded their music including David Bowie, Billy Fury & more)
- West Hampstead bars & Pubs like The Gallery, The Black Lion, The Alice House
- The Railway pub (famous for once hosting music gigs by the Rolling Stones & Jimi Hendrix, as well as once being a regular haunt of many musicians)
- West Hamsptead Station (including both West Hampstead Thameslink overground railway and the underground Jubilee line tube station
- Billy Fury Way with its current graffiti situation
- West Hampstead Farmers Market (only there on Saturdays between 10am-2pm)
- Recommended West Hampstead Restaurants including Cafe Bon, Hana restaurant (Persian), Pham House, Mr Gingham, Toomai, Bengal Spice, Schnitzel, Nandos, Lola's Bakery, Guglee, Bellaluna, The Wet Fish Cafe
- West Hampstead shops including charity shops, Little Waitrose West Hampstead (near the Fire Station), Art4Fun (Art 4 Fun), Robert Graham Scotch Whisky and Cigars Cigar Lounge, The Hampstead Butcher and Providore, West End Lane Books, Florists
- West Hampstead Library
- Detour along Honeybourne Road to see some West Hampstead property, flats & houses briefly
- Hampstead Cricket Club
- West End Green
- Emmanual Church
- Hampstead Synagogue
- Fortune Green Road
- Mill Lane
- Emmanual Church of England Primary School
- - -
Music Credits:
- Tracks of my Fears by John Deley and the 41 players
- Eagle Rock by Wes Hutchinson
- Where You Are Now by AlexBeroza via ccmixter licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution licence (
How to Spend a Rainy Day in Glasgow
Here are 5 (mostly) indoor attractions you can visit in Glasgow on a rainy day:
People's Palace and Winter Gardens:
Tennent's Tour at Wellpark Brewery:
Gallery of Modern Art:
Riverside Museum/Glasgow Museum of Transport:
Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum:
BONUS: 4 out of 5 are completely free to enter, just the brewery tour costs money but it's only a tenner and you get a pint thrown in so it's not too bad a deal ;)
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Places to see in ( Stokesley - UK )
Places to see in ( Stokesley - UK )
Stokesley is a small market town and civil parish in the Hambleton district of North Yorkshire, England. Historically part of the North Riding of Yorkshire, it lies on the River Leven. Stokesley is located about two miles south of the boundary of the borough of Middlesbrough and ten miles south of Middlesbrough town centre. Stokesley is located between Middlesbrough, Guisborough and Northallerton, in a farming area. Local attractions for visitors include nearby Great Ayton, as well as Captain Cook's monument and Roseberry Topping, both of which lie within the North York Moors National Park.
Stokesley was first granted a charter to hold fairs in 1223 by Henry III. The Pack Horse Bridge, crossing the River Leven from the riverside walk, dates from the 17th century. Renowned for its large range of building types, the latter construction within Stokesley of sundry fine Georgian architecture is thought to have contributed much to its later character. Other prominent historical features around the town include the Mill Wheel, thought to represent the site of a mill recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086. The famous survey, by William the Conqueror, also contained the first written record of a church and priest in Stokesley. The present Church of St Peter and St Paul - the oldest building in the town - has a later medieval tower and chancel, with a Georgian nave built around 1777: it is located just off the market Plain and has colourful twentieth century stained glass and some woodwork carved by the Mouseman of Kilburn.
Visitors to Stokesley today will find an intact historic high street, lined with many independent small shops and restaurants. Other facilities include a leisure centre with a swimming pool, a medium-sized supermarket, show-ground, camping site, health centre, industrial estate, library, police and fire stations. The town also has five pubs. Stokesley is also the home of Quorn, produced by Marlow Foods. There are many grade II listed buildings, including four Grade II* listed buildings of special architectural or historic interest. These are Barclays Bank, Handyside Cottage, the Manor House and the Old Rectory.
The inaugural meeting of the Stokesley Agricultural Society was held at the Golden Lion Hotel, now Chapters Hotel, in 1859. This boutique hotel was also used as the local law courts for the area being ideally placed between Middlesbrough and Northallerton. Stokesley Agricultural Show, first held in 1859, is held every year on the third Saturday in September. It is, perhaps, the largest one day show in England.
There is a weekly market held on a Friday in the main square called the Plain. A farmers' market takes place on the first Saturday of each month. A four-day fair takes place every September in the town centre. The fair spans the full length of the high street and rides such as the KMG Equinox-Tango, the Extreme, Vertigo and various Crows rides attend. The fair always begins on a Wednesday evening and runs until the Saturday, opening all day on the Saturday due to the annual agricultural show which takes place on the showground.
Stokesley is served by the Arriva service 28a from Middlesbrough every hour and the 81 from Marske Estate every hour. Hutchinson's run irregular services 82 (Stokesley-Yarm) and 83 (Stokesley-Seamer & Newby). Abbott's of Leeming run hourly service 80/89 to Northallerton & Romanby via Osmotherley. On Fridays only there is also a bus to Kildale. On Wednesdays only the 27 runs to Whitby via the Esk Valley.
Stokesley was originally served by rail and had a railway station and extensive sidings on the Northallerton to Stockton branch. The station closed to passengers in June 1954, pre-dating the large scale closures of the Beeching era. Goods facilities remained until August 1965 when the line closed completely. The station was featured extensively in the British Transport film A Farmer Moves South in 1951, and now included in a DVD compilation. The nearest railway station is now at Great Ayton.
( Stokesley - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Stokesley . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Stokesley - UK
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LONDON TUBE TRAVEL : KILBURN TO HEATROW AIRPORT
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Visiting the Bank of England with My International Finance Class
CAPA official vlogger Andres Hoberman takes us along on his International Finance class trip to the Bank of England and the London Walkie Talkie building.
Places to see in ( Brackley - UK )
Places to see in ( Brackley - UK )
Brackley is a town in south Northamptonshire, England. It is about 19 miles from Oxford and about 22 miles from Northampton. Historically a market town based on the wool and lace trade, it was built on the intersecting trade routes between London, Birmingham and the English Midlands and between Cambridge and Oxford. Brackley has connections with Formula 1 as it is close to Silverstone and home to the Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team.
Brackley, originally also known as Brachelai or Brackele, was held in 1086 by Earl Alberic. After this it passed to the Earl of Leicester, and to the families of De Quincy and Roland. In the 11th and 12th centuries Brackley was in the Hundred of Odboldistow and in the Manor of Halse. Richard I (The Lionheart) named five official sites for jousting tournaments so that such events could not be used as local wars, and Brackley was one of these. The tournament site is believed to be to the south of the castle where the A422 now passes.
Brackley used the poor house at Culworth until 1834, when Parliament passed the Poor Law Amendment Act and as a result Brackley Poor Law Union was founded.[5] A workhouse for 250 people was built in 1836, southwest of the town on Banbury Road. It was demolished in the 1930s.
Brackley Castle was built soon after 1086. Its earthwork remains lie between Hinton Road and Tesco. It comprised a motte mound 10 feet (3.0 m) high and approximately 44 yards (40 m) in diameter with an outer bailey to the east. Archaeological excavation has revealed evidence of a ditch defining the perimeter of the bailey. Two fishponds originally lay outside the ditch but have subsequently been infilled – however south of St. James Lake may have formed a part of this. Brackley Castle may have gone out of use in 1147. It was destroyed in 1173.
The almshouses were founded in 1633 by Sir Thomas Crewe of Steane. They have one storey plus attic dormers. They were originally six houses but by 1973 they had been converted into four apartments. Brackley Manor House was also a 17th-century Jacobean building that also originally had one storey plus attic dormers. In 1875–78 the Earl of Ellesmere had it rebuilt on a larger scale, in the same style but retaining only the doorway and one window of the original building. It is now Winchester House School, a coeducational preparatory school for children aged from 3–13. It used to be a Woodard School.
Brackley is close to the A43 road, which now bypasses the town, linking it to Towcester and Northampton to the north-east and the M40 motorway to the west. The A422 links it to Banbury and Buckingham. The nearest railway station is Kings Sutton, about 6 miles (10 km) west of the town. Brackley had two railway stations of its own that were closed in the 1960s. Brackley's first station, known in its latter years as Brackley Town, opened in May 1850 as part of the Buckinghamshire Railway's Buckingham and Brackley Junction line between Verney Junction and Banbury Merton Street via Buckingham.
( Brackley - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Brackley . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Brackley - UK
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Quality of Life in Bristol, United Kingdom , rank 57th in the world in 2019
Quality of Life Index:176.82
Cost Of Living In Bristol, United Kingdom In 2019, Rank 114th In The World
Edgware Road, London
Edgware Road, London. Edgware Road is a famous and lively road in London known for its diversity and multicultural makeup.