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Grant Museum of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy
Grant Museum of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy
Grant Museum of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy, Rockefeller Building, 21 University Street, London, WC1E 6DE

1.04km

Part of the University College London, skeletons, taxidermy, entomology and specimens preserved in fluid.Read more

Museums Tourist Attractions Sightseeing Natural History Museums

University College London
UCL Geology Collections
University College London, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT

1.09km

Part of the University College London, rocks, minerals, fossils on display in the Rock Room, limited opening hours[21]Read more

Museums Tourist Attractions Sightseeing Natural History Museums

Museum of Life Sciences
Museum of Life Sciences
Museum of Life Sciences, King's College London, London, SE1 1UL

2.23km

Historic biological and pharmaceutical collections, including skeletons, fluid-preserved material, taxidermy, and...Read more

Museums Tourist Attractions Sightseeing Natural History Museums

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Central London has many fantastic shopping streets crammed with all manner of shops selling goodies you never even knew you needed until you see them.

Jermyn Street is a particularly good example of this, when construction work is not going on - which is almost never - it is one of the most beautiful streets in St James's lined with exclusive shops selling men's clothing and male grooming products - silver cut-throat razors and the like.

Oxford Street is perhaps the most famous shopping street in London if not the World with approximately three hundred shops squeezed in to a 2km long road.

Regent Street which crosses Oxford Street is arguably as well known, at least to Monopoly fans. Regent Street is home to the flagship Apple store in London; Burberry's flagship store; and of course the kids' favourite, the World famous Hamley's Toy Store.

Another famous London shopping street which meets Oxford Street is Bond Street (comprising of Old Bond Street and New Bond Street). It is a true fashion mecca housing flagship stores by Chanel, Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Bottega Veneta, and many other leading fashion brands.


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Blue Plaques in London

Charles Villiers Stanford Blue Plaque - Sir Charles Stanford 1852-1924 musician lived here 1894-1916
Richard Hodgson And Hawkwood Lodge Blue Plaque - Hawkwood Lodge Locally Listed building. The only surviving structure from the Hawkwood estate erected by Richard Hodgson in the late 1840’s. Hawkwood House itself was demolished following bomb damage in 1944. Hodgson was Lord of the Manor of Chingford St Pauls from 1844 – 1866
Rosalind Franklin Blue Plaque - Rosalind Franklin 1920-1958 pioneer of the study of molecular structures including DNA lived here 1951-1958
Germaine Necker Blue Plaque - 1813-1814  Germaine Necker  Baronne de Staël-Holstein    Lived in a house on this site  during the last of her  ten years of exile
James Robinson Blue Plaque - James Robinson 1813-1862 pioneer of anaesthesia and dentistry lived and worked here
Walter Scott And Thomas Blackwell Terracotta Plaque - The Cedars. Gateway of The Cedars, home of Thomas Blackwell (died 1907) giver of Harrow Weald Recreation Ground and benefactor of All Saints Harrow Weald and St Anselms Hatch End Churches. House visited in 1806 by Novelist Sir Walter Scott.

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Old Bond Street in the News

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