Tag Archives: london

IFS Cloud Cable Car/Emirates Air Line

I walked along the south bank of the Thames from Woolwich as far as North Greenwich.  Once I got to the area around the O2 arena, I wanted to get back across to the Excel center and the easiest route was to take the gondola across the river.  This was the Emirates Air Line.  It still had a bunch of branding for this but apparently the name was changed in June of 2022.  I was able to use my Oyster to pay for it although it didn’t seem as cheap as other forms of travel that TfL provides!  I could see the system from long before the time I got to Greenwich since it is obvious as you look upriver.

There was virtually no one using the crossing when I was there.  I just wandered into the terminal after having spent some time down on the riverbank watching the gondolas passing overhead.  I stepped straight into my own car and was never troubled by the possibility of sharing space.  This made it easy for me to bounce around taking photos of whatever caught my eye.

The crossing only takes a few minutes.  You do get a good view of things as you go.  The O2 is a lot easier to see from the air than from the ground so that is great.  Coming across the river, I was able to look down on the various construction projects underway on the north bank of the Thames.    The Excel center is the largest thing to see as you head north but there are lots of surrounding structures around the docks as you descend into the other terminal.  The view of LCY is good to and, if only a departing flight had been coming out, I would have got an interesting shot.

I have no idea how useful the crossing is.  It certainly wasn’t busy when I used it, but I was not there at what would be considered peak time.  Even so, it still seemed to be a bit of an oddity in a city where public transportation gets heavy usage.  Emirates has obviously discontinued sponsorship, but that decision might have come during the pandemic when airlines were hardly flush with cash.  Who knows.  It was still quite fun to use, though.

Camden Lock

Every once in a while, you have a moment when you realize something obvious.  I used to occasionally go to Camden Market when I lived in Town and I knew of Camden Lock but it never occurred to me that Camden Lock was called that because it had a lock.  How did that never register?  Anyway, it became obvious as we came to Camden during our walk along the Regents Canal.  There were the locks and a bridge over the top of them.  It was absolutely heaving with people.  Camden is a tourist magnet and so I was keen to keep moving through.  I did stop long enough to have a look at the locks, though.

Parliament In The Morning

The day after we arrived in Town, I headed out on my own for a while.  Before I hopped on the tube to go east, the sun was up and illuminating the Houses of Parliament rather nicely so I strolled along the South Bank and across Westminster Bridge to get some shots of the newly refurbished clock tower before heading off.  It was very busy with tourists but it was great to see everything looking so nice on a sunny morning.  (Besides, while I may have considered this area my manor, I am just a tourist too at this point.)

Cars in Kings Cross

Our walk along the Regents Canal took us to Kings Cross and, when we got there, plenty of people were out enjoying the sunny Saturday.  This included a bunch of car enthusiasts that had brought a variety of vehicles.  These were not the sort of thing I see at Exotics@RTC.  This was more a focus on enthusiasts for older vehicles that they have restored with much love.  Old vehicles from my childhood were all over the place.  I liked lots of them but the Bond Bug was a particular favorite.  I had quite forgotten about this type of car until I saw it here.

Borough Market Has Changed A Lot

When I worked in London, we used to go top Borough Market a lot.  Nancy would shop there sometimes and we would often go up at weekends.  Consequently, we were keen to go and see how it is now.  In some respects, it was very familiar but in others it had changed a lot.  The railway bridges over the market have been expanded in more recent times.  At one point, there was a suggestion that the market would go as a result of the railway changes but thankfully that has not been the case.

What does seem to have changed is the balance of the types of vendor that are there.  There were always plenty of places to buy food to eat straightaway.  However, I seem to recall a lot more vendors of meat, fish and produce.  There are certainly still a lot of these but now the balance seems to have shifted towards more of the immediate eating options.  I am not saying that this is a bad thing but it does feel like it has turned away from being a market towards being a tourist attraction.

Since we were tourists, I can’t have much ground for complaint about this.  I love looking around the market with its cast iron framing and the variety of stalls.  There are some great meat vendors present and a few fish stalls too.  We did have a guilty treat with some donuts and they were very good indeed.  I am obviously part of the reason it has evolved.  There is an old sign on the wall that lays out rents for the market.  I suspect this is a little out of date at this point.

Thames Barrier

For as long as I lived and worked in London, I had never really seen much of the Thames Barrier.  I had seen it from as distance and even gone through it on a boat when at a party but I hadn’t really ever got a good look at it.  For those that don’t know, the barrier was built to protect London from flooding following some very destructive floods in the 50s.  Construction started in the 70s (we Brits know how to get things done fast) and finished in the 80s.  The barrier is the most obvious part of the construction but it also involved building up the banks along the river downstream where the water level would be raised when the barrier was closed.

There are multiple piers across the river with a rotating panel between each.  These panels normally lie on the bed of the river but they can be rotated up to block the flow between the piers.  I understand that, when the barrier is closed, they actually slightly over raise the panels to allow some flow under them to moderate the increase in levels.

The good news while I was there was that one panel was raised and another was rotated right out of the water allowing me to get a good look at the design.  Each pier is clad in a stainless steel surface which is quite striking and makes the barrier very recognizable to people.  Looking down the river towards the barrier, you can appreciate the width that it covered.  When close to it, you can compress the perspective and make all of the piers look really close together.  With the sun out, the piers were shining nicely.  I sat and ate my lunch on the banks of the river by the barrier and watched the river traffic coming and going for a while.  One other person was there.  It was a most tranquil spot to take a break.

Excel Entrance Sculpture

I made a detour to the Excel exhibition centre to visit a friend from high school.  He works there and was able to meet up and chat for a while.  As I walked up the steps, I came to a sculpture that they have commemorating the workers that had made the docks the vibrant place they were for hundreds of years.  I thought it was a pretty cool sculpture so here it is!

The Attendant

YouTube is the source of information on so many things.  One such thing is the re-purposing of old public toilets.  I had watched a video about Attendant and decided we needed to check it out when in Town.  We actually ended up meeting with some family in the West End and, since it was time for lunch, we went to check it out.

The café is set in an old, underground Victorian toilet.  It looks virtually unchanged on the surface and there is not much change below the surface either.  The urinals still line the wall but have been  provided with table surfaces so you can sit in one like an individual cubicle.  There are still cisterns mounted on the walls above your heads.  It is a not a big place so you might find it hard to get a table on a busy day but we timed it well.  Even so, we were a little squashed in to fit.

The food and drink was fine.  It isn’t the greatest place we have ever been but it was good and the staff were incredibly friendly and helpful.  It isn’t a place you would end up relaxing for a long time but it has a unique vibe and a special look to it.  Don’t go a long way out of your way to visit it but, if you are nearby, you might be interested to check it out.

MV Royal Iris Decaying Slowly

The Thames is a busy waterway for commercial shipping and has plenty of docks and wharves along its shores.  Seeing boats tied up is no surprise but seeing one that is sinking is not what I would have expected.  That is exactly what I found, though.  This old ferry was sitting at an awkward angle and looking very unwell.  I came upon it from the stern and then had to go inshore as the path deviated away from the river but it was soon back on the water and I was able to look back at the sad vessel.  A little research when I got home told me it is the MV Royal Iris, once a Mersey ferry.  She is not looking at her prime now!

Regents Canal

There was a time when the canals of London were not a good place to be.  They were risky areas to go and they were a good place to dump stuff.  How things have changed over time and now canals are getting a new lease on life.  Developments along them are springing up.  I wanted to check out Regents Canal while were were in London.  We started out at Paddington Basin and then walked along the canal through Little Venice, Maida Vale, Regents park, on to Camden and finishing up at Kings Cross.

You really do go through a wide variety of places on the walk.  Almost all of it can be along the canal but there is a tunnel it takes which requires a detour over the hill through which the tunnel cuts.  You go through some wealthy neighborhoods, some quite poor ones, past a power station and then suddenly in to the area behind some mansions in Regents park.  You even go through the zoo although the animals seemed intent on not being visible to those that hadn’t paid to visit!

As you get close to the popular areas, the canal can get quite busy on the towpath but for other sections, you are not exactly alone but you are definitely free to stroll without encountering too many people.  Meanwhile, boats will chug past you.

It is surprising how tranquil it feels along the canal.  You are very close to the heart of London yet feel you could be a million miles away.  You see all sorts of people as you go and, when it is sunny like it was when we were there, it all seems very picturesque.  To go between two of London’s main terminus stations, this isn’t the quickest route but, if you have the time, it is definitely one of the nicest.