Friday, July 27, 2012

Google Celebrate London 2012

Google Home Page. July 27th 2012

Google are celebrating Opening Ceremony Event London 2012.


The 2012 Summer Olympic Games, officially the Games of the XXX Olympiad, also known informally as London 2012, is scheduled to take place in London, United Kingdom, from 27 July (when the opening ceremony is held) until 12 August 2012. The first event, the group stages in women's football, began two days earlier on 25 July. Over 10,000 athletes from 204 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) are expected to participate.
Following a bid headed by former Olympic champion Sebastian Coe and the then Mayor of London Ken Livingstone, London was selected as the host city on 6 July 2005 during the 117th IOC Session in Singapore, defeating bids from Moscow, New York City, Madrid and Paris. London will become the first city to officially host the modern Olympic Games three times,having previously done so in 1908 and in 1948.
Construction in preparation for the Games has involved considerable redevelopment, particularly themed towards sustainability. The main focus of this is a new 200 hectare Olympic Park, constructed on a former industrial site at Stratford in the east of London.The Games also make use of many venues which were already in place before the bid.

Opening Ceremony London 2012

London: London, blow our minds. The world city that needs no introduction but could do with an Olympic-sized pick-me-up in the midst of economic recession launches the 2012 Summer Games with a spectacular opening ceremony on Friday that faces a unique challenge: to be as memorable as Beijing's planet-wowing, money-no-object extravaganza of 2008.
The British capital will set itself apart, as it has so often down the centuries, by being different. Beijing's curtain raiser featured 2008 pounding drummers and a cauldron-lighter who seemed to float in the air of the Bird's Nest stadium. London will have 70 sheep, 12 horses, 10 chickens and nine geese - recruited by Oscar-winning director Danny Boyle along with a cast and crew of 10,000 to present a quirky, humorous and vibrant vision of quintessential Britain, its history and future.
London is not the same as it was when the Games were awarded seven years ago. Its serenity and confidence were shaken by riots last year and by terror bombings on the transport network that killed 56 people the day after the International Olympic Committee picked London over Paris in 2005. In London, the Olympic Games have come to a sprawling, historic metropolis that lives and breathes sports, with a population more global and diverse than perhaps any other, but which still feels it needs the Olympic spotlight to secure its future as one of the world's great cities.
Opening Ceremony London 2012: What's new
AP Photo
In depicting Britain, warts and all, Boyle has drawn from William Shakespeare, British pop culture, literature and music and other sources of inspiration that will speak not just to Anglophiles but to people across the globe. One segment involves actor Daniel Craig's James Bond and former Beatle Paul McCartney will lead a sing-along.
Boyle's Isles of Wonder show will celebrate the green and pleasant land of meadows, farms, cottages, village cricket matches and bird song, but also dwell on Britain's darker industrial past. That's not a surprise from a movie director who depicted Scottish heroin addicts in Trainspotting and Indian poor in Slumdog Millionaire.
As well as thousands of athletes and performers, some 60,000 spectators will pack the Olympic Stadium. Political leaders from around the world, US first lady Michelle Obama and her daughters and a sprinkling of European and celebrity royalty will also attend.
According to the Sunday Times, one section will feature characters from children's fiction classics including Alice in Wonderland and Peter Pan - and a showdown between Lord Voldemort, the villain of JK Rowling's Harry Potter books and a horde of flying magical nannies based on Mary Poppins.
"I would have thought the difficulty is how you cram in all that is great about our country," British Prime Minister David Cameron said Thursday. "Whether it is sport, art, literature, history, contribution to world events, there are so many things to celebrate about our country that packing all that in to these hours must be a pretty tough task. But I am confident they have done a good job."
Many of juiciest and most significant details from the three-hour show, including the identity of the person or people who will light the Olympic cauldron - if, indeed, there is one - remain secret. That is, in itself, remarkable for the first social media Olympics, where the urge to tweet anything and everything is putting more scrutiny than ever on organisers and the 10,902 athletes from 204 countries.
Most will return home after 16 days of competition as they arrived: the pride of family and friends but still unknown to the wider public, unsung practitioners of sports - think archery, synchronised swimming, wrestling and the like - that get little attention for 206 weeks before blossoming in the two-week Olympic festival.
Medalists will be guaranteed recognition and perhaps fame and fortune for the luckier ones, especially the more than 300 who win gold. A hundredth of a second here, a centimetre there, in the pool or in the shooting gallery could make an athlete a household name. Their gold medals will be largest of any summer games and, at 400 grams (14 ounces), the heaviest, too.
Amputee runner Oscar Pistorius and women boxers will get headlines for being Olympic pioneers. But for other established stars who fail in quests to retain or win more Olympic titles, London will mark the end or the beginning of the end of their careers.
US swimmer Michael Phelps insists these will be his last games. The 14-time gold medalist will go out with a bang, aiming to claim the unofficial title of greatest Olympian ever from Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina. She got 18 medals. Phelps has 16, and seven opportunities in London to overtake her. His rivalry with US teammate Ryan Lochte promises one of the most compelling dramas of London. They will swim against each other twice: in medleys over 200 metres and, on the first full day of competition on Saturday, over 400 meters in the Aquatics Center with its ceiling that slopes like the underbelly of a whale.
Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt, the other standout star from Beijing, wants to become a sports legend on a par with Jesse Owens, Pele or Muhammad Ali by retaining his Olympic titles in the 100, 200 and sprint relay. But the World's Fastest Man faces stiffer competition this time from countryman Yohan Blake and American rivals Tyson Gay and Justin Gatlin.
In Beijing, the geopolitical significance of China's rise as a global superpower was as much the story as the sports. London, the first city to host the event a third time after previous games in 1908 and 1948, could in contrast be a purer Olympics, more about the athletes than the context. Could be more fun, too, without the backdrop of international concern over China's human rights record.
Big questions are how London's transport system will cope with millions of spectators and whether grumbling Britons will get behind their Olympics as they did for this year's celebrations of Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee. The monarch will officially open the games at Friday's ceremony that will start at 9 PM with the sound of a 27-ton bell forged at the 442-year-old Whitechapel Bell Foundry, which made London's Big Ben and Philadelphia's Liberty Bell.
Lavishing more than 9 billion pounds ($14 billion), triple the estimated cost when London secured the games in 2005, in the midst of severe economic storms in Britain and Europe has provoked pointed and persistent questions about whether the expense can be justified and whether the games will have a lasting positive impact for the host city and for Britain.
The most obvious legacy for London is Olympic Park, with the 80,000-capacity stadium that will host the opening ceremony and other new venues. It is built on formerly derelict, polluted industrial land in the east of the city that bore the brunt of bombing in World War II and, for centuries, concentrated London's stinkiest industries and its poor.
Other benefits from the July 27-Aug. 12 games, particularly the power of the Olympics to inspire kids to take up sports and to aim high, might not be obvious for years.

Opening Ceremony Video



Monday, July 23, 2012

Getting arround London


Public transport: 
Transport for London (tel: 0843 222 1234; www.tfl.gov.uk) operates London’s bus network and provides comprehensive information on all forms of transport in London. The London Underground (tel: 0845 330 9880; www.tfl.gov.uk/tube), commonly referred to as the ‘Tube', is the oldest and most extensive underground system in the world. The network of 12 lines is divided into six zones, determining the price of tickets. A prepaid electronic Oyster card is the cheapest way to travel around London – enquire at a Tube station for details. Around 80 London Underground stations are benefiting from free Wi-Fi internet access during the London Olympics; this will switch to a pay-as-you go service after the Games.
All London bus journeys cost the same. On many routes, tickets need to be bought prior to boarding – a carnet of six tickets bought in advance from newsagents and Tube stations offers reduced prices, as does a pre-pay Oyster card. There is also a one-day bus pass. A day travelcard and a three-day travelcard can be used on buses and the London underground, and holders receive discounts on river services.
Thames Clippers (www.thamesclippers.com) commuter ferries run between Savoy Pier (central at Embankment) and Royal Arsenal Woolwich Pier, with stops including Canary Wharf Pier, Greenwich Pier and London Bridge City Pier and a high-speed commuter service runs from Chelsea Harbour in the west to Blackfriars.
A new cable car across the Thames also opened in summer 2012 , connecting Greenwich peninsular in the south to the Royal Docks in the east. Linking the O2 and the ExCel Centre, the Emirates Air Line (www.tfl.gov.uk) journey takes just five minutes. Each pod can carry 10 passengers, with 34 pods in total. The cable car runs daily.
Underground railway Crossrail is currently under construction, and scheduled to open in 2018. This rail link running east to west beneath central London promises to offer speedier cross-city travel, and take the pressure off the existing transport network. On completion, a second underground rail route, the Chelsea-Hackney Line, running from south-west to north-east London, will begin construction.
Taxis: 
Black cabs can be hailed on the street or booked through Dial-a-Cab (tel: (020) 7426 3420) and Radio Taxis (tel: (020) 7272 0272). Minicabs should be booked over the telephone; a reputable city-wide firm is Addison Lee (tel: 0844 800 6677).
Driving: 
There is a daily charge for all vehicles entering the congestion charging zone in central London Monday to Friday between 0700 and 1800. See www.cclondon.com.
Off-road parking is available 24 hours at NCP garages (tel: 0845 050 7080; www.ncp.co.uk) situated around London. Street parking in central London can be extremely expensive.
Car hire: 
Major car firms include Avis (tel: 0844 544 5566; www.avis.co.uk), Budget (tel: 0844 5443 439;www.budget.co.uk) and Hertz (tel: 0870 599 6699; www.hertz.co.uk). There has been a recent growth in budget/internet car hire companies, spearheaded by easyCar (tel: (020) 3059 5684;www.easycar.com).
Bicycle hire: 
Public-use bicycles can be found at many docking stations across central London. Bikes are available on a membership or a pay-as-you-go basis. For the most cost effective cycling, sign up atwww.tfl.gov.uk/barclayscyclehire. Casual access is best for sporadic users and non-UK residents, and can be bought online, by phone or at the docking stations themselves. London’s public bikes are available round-the-clock and year-round, offering a hassle-free way for Londoners and tourists alike to travel around and enjoy the city.
Source : worldtravelguide

Travel to London


Flying to London

Flights to London are available from a wide range of international airlines and low-cost carriers, including British Airways, Virgin Atlantic, Ryanair, easyJet, Lufthansa and KLM. There is a wide range of London flights to choose from as the city is a year-round destination, with the peak period for fares between June and September. If you're looking for cheap flights to London, lower fares can be nabbed in mid-autumn and spring.
Flight times: 
From New York - 7 hours 40 minutes; Los Angeles - 10 hours 20 minutes; Toronto - 7 hours; Sydney - 23 hours 5 minutes (plus stopover).

Travel by road

Summary:
Traffic drives on the left in the UK and drivers must be at least 17 years old. Speed limits are 113kph (70mph) on motorways, 97kph (60mph) on single-lane main roads and 48kph (30mph) in built-up areas. Overseas driving licences and International Driving Permits are valid for up to one year. Insurance is mandatory. Overseas visitors bringing their own cars should bring registration documents and check with their insurance company as to whether a Green Card is needed.
Emergency breakdown service:
AA (tel: 0800 887 766); Green Flag (tel: 0800 051 0636); RAC (tel: 0800 828 282).
Routes:
The M25 encircles Greater London. The M1, M11, M20, M23, M3, M4 and M40 radiate from London to the rest of Britain. The M1 goes north to Leeds, the M11 northeast to Cambridge and East Anglia, the M20 southeast to Folkestone (from where the A20 continues to Dover), the M23 goes south to Gatwick airport (and continues as the A23 to Brighton), the M3 southwest to Southampton, the M4 west to Heathrow airport and Bristol, and the M40 northwest to Oxford and Birmingham. Motorists can travel by train through the Channel Tunnel from Calais, France to Folkestone in southeast England, with Eurotunnel (tel: 0844 335 3535, in the UK only; www.eurotunnel.com).
Driving times:
From Cambridge - 1 hour 30 minutes; Oxford - 1 hour 30 minutes; Folkestone - 1 hour 45 minutes; Birmingham - 2 hours 15 minutes; Bristol - 2 hours 45 minutes; Manchester - 3 hours 35 minutes.
Coaches:
National and international services use Victoria coach station, a short walk from Victoria train station, at 164 Buckingham Palace Road, SW1. National Express (tel: 08717 818178;www.nationalexpress.com) operates services throughout the UK, and has stops throughout London, as does Megabus (http://uk.megabus.com). Eurolines (tel: 0871 781 8178;www.eurolines.co.uk) has departures to over 500 European destinations.

Travel by rail

Services:
England’s rail network has a mixed reputation - delays, cancellations and over-full carriages are common, and fares are typically high. For the cheapest tickets, book online in advance.
London’s main stations are Victoria (southwest), Paddington (west), Euston and Kings Cross (north), Liverpool Street (east), Waterloo (south) and Charing Cross (central), and they connect with different regions of the country. Buy tickets at the station – from ticket desks or machines – before boarding. Do note that London’s main stations become very crowded during rush hour (Monday to Friday 0800-0930 and 1700-1830).
Several key stations have recently received facelifts and extensions. Busy London Waterloo has recently benefitted from a 220m (722 ft) balcony, relieving the heavy people flow across the station floor. A new concourse at King’s Cross has vastly increased the station’s capacity, and Stratford station, near the Olympic Park, has been extended.
Operators:
Rail services in England are co-ordinated by a number of independent operators. Railway information is available 24 hours from National Rail Enquiries (tel: 0845 748 4950;www.nationalrail.co.uk). Eurostar (tel: 0843 218 6186, in the UK only; www.eurostar.com) connects London St Pancras International with Avignon, Calais, Brussels, Lille, Paris-Gare du Nord and Disneyland Paris via the English Channel. Scotrail (tel: 0845 601 5929; www.scotrail.co.uk) runs overnight sleeper trains from Euston to Scotland’s main cities.
Journey times:
From Edinburgh – 4 hours 30 minutes; Cardiff – 2 hours 10 minutes; Manchester – 2 hours 10 minutes; Birmingham – 1 hour 25 minutes; Brighton – 1 hour; Paris - 2 hours 20 minutes.
Source : Worldtravelguide

Prefered Hotel in London


Hotels in London are in very good supply. While, in global terms, it is an expensive city in which to lay your head, those on a budget have many options for cheap hotels in London. The streets around Kings Cross station are chock-a-block with chain hotels and budget B&Bs, and the area in between Bayswater and Paddington is also densely populated with a range of accommodation. Grand and historic 5-star establishments are London’s forte, with the newly refurbished Savoy, The Dorchester and The Ritz leading the way.
The London hotels below have been grouped into three pricing categories:
Luxury (over £300)
Moderate (£100 to £300)
Cheap (up to £100)
These London hotel prices are the starting costs for a standard double room and include taxes and breakfast unless otherwise specified.

The Dorchester

Price: Luxury
Sat beside Hyde Park, the glamorous Dorchester is a stately cavern of old-school British class. Dining includes high-end Asian restaurant China Tang and purveyors of modern British cuisine The Grill at The Dorchester, while the extensive spa in the basement is an exceptional pampering space. For all-out luxury, there’s the baroque and rococo Oliver Messel Suite, perched a-top the hotel, with a terrace offering prime views across the London rooftops. 
Address: Park Lane, London, United Kingdom
Telephone: (020) 7629 8888.

The Ritz

Price: Luxury
Since 1906, The Ritz has been providing exemplary service to its well-heeled guests. The interior of this elegant building is fastidiously decorated in Louis XVI style with marble columns, rich fabrics and antique furniture. The rooms are furnished in soothing pastel colours, and the chandelier-filled restaurant is offers classic glamour for formal meals, and the famous Ritz afternoon tea is served in the Palm Court at 1530 or 1700. 
Address: 150 Piccadilly, London, United Kingdom
Telephone: (020) 7493 8181.

The Savoy

Price: Luxury
 A haunt of London’s moneyed elite since the late 1800s, London’s Savoy re-opened its grand doors in 2010 following a three-year overhaul. Costing around £220 million, the spangly improvements have been enticing high-profile clientele from across the world, with revamped areas including the lavish guest rooms, the American Bar, and the famous Savoy Grill, which is overseen by TV kitchen king Gordon Ramsey. One thing that’s not changed is the stunning view across the Thames.
Address: Strand, London, United Kingdom
Telephone: (020) 7836 4343.

Hoxton Hotel

Price: Moderate
In the heart of Hoxton, in the same premises as the popular Hoxton Grill, is this wallet savvy establishment. The Hoxton Hotel forgoes the money-making mini bar and instead has free milk and bottled water in the fridge, and sells the like of sweets and wine at reasonable prices in the lobby. Wi-Fi is also free, and guests receive a simple but tasty breakfast from coffee house chain Pret A Manger delivered to their room. 
Address: 81 Great Eastern Street, London, United Kingdom
Telephone: (020) 7550 1000.

The Soho Hotel

Price: Moderate
Rooms at this trendy hotel are sumptuously appointed in a modern, eclectic style, not forgetting flatscreen TVs, huge, ultra-comfortable beds, and sleek bathrooms kitted out in grey granite, glass and oak. Befitting a hotel nestled in the heart of London’s entertainment district, there is a swish private event space and two private screening rooms. Onsite restaurant Refuel has an attractive dinner menu, as well as serving afternoon tea and an extensive selection of breakfast dishes. 
Address: 4 Richmond Mews, London, United Kingdom
Telephone: (020) 7559 3000.

The Zetter

Price: Moderate
This converted warehouse in the heart of Clerkenwell is pretty affordable considering its desirable location. Its 59 rooms are decked in sleek upholstery, cool mood lighting and in-room entertainment systems. Nice little touches, such as hot water bottles and old Penguin paperbacks, add a homely feel. The Zetter’s popular restaurant, which serves modern Mediterranean food, occupies most of the ground floor and looks onto St John's Square. 
Address: 86-88 Clerkenwell Road, London, United Kingdom
Telephone: (020) 7324 4444.

66 Camden Square

Price: Cheap
Sat at a short distance from the hub of Camden’s eccentric babble – around a 10-minute walk from Camden Market – 66 Camden Square is a charming and unusual bed and breakfast in London. The simple structure was designed by owner Rodger Davis and is made almost entirely from teak and glass, with two guestrooms and a terrace for breakfast. And if Camden isn’t enough to keep you occupied, the owners’ blue parrot also provides entertainment.
Address: 66 Camden Square, London, United Kingdom
Telephone: (020) 7485 4622.

Hampstead Guest House

Price: Cheap
Escape to this charming bed and breakfast situated in one of London's most sought-after residential areas. Just 20 minutes on the Underground from central London and a short walk from beautiful Hampstead Heath, the stunning Victorian house is tucked away from a high street strewn with stylish boutiques and bistros. The ambience is distinctly homely with eclectic, bohemian furnishings, a family dog, floor-to-ceiling bookshelves and a rambling garden. 
Address: 2 Kemplay Road, London, United Kingdom
Telephone: (020) 7435 8679.

Pavilion

Price: Cheap
This fun 30-room hotel in London is a great value option for those wanting their London stay served with a funky twist. Each room has its own theme – including Chinese-themed room Enter the Dragon, 1970s infused chamber Honky Tonk Afro, and Moorish-inspired Casablanca Nights – and the hotel claims have housed many celebs and fashion photography shoots over the years. Paddington Station is but a few minutes’ walk away.
Address: 34-36 Sussex Gardens, Hyde Park, London, United Kingdom
Telephone: (020) 7262 0905.

Source : worldtravelguide

London 2012 : Trivia


And finally, some Olympic trivia

London Olympic RingsSee below a bunch of things you didn't know, and probably didn't ned to know.
More than 1 billion people are expected to tune into the opening ceremony of the London Games, which will be directed by Oscar-winning "Slumdog Millionaire" director Danny Boyle.
London previously held the Olympic Games in 1908 and 1948 and the upcoming 2012 Games will make it the only modern city to have hosted the Games three times.
The 2012 Games are expected to end up costing £20 billion, almost 10 times the original stated amount.
The Olympic Park sports venues will use at least 40 percent less water than equivalent buildings elsewhere due to initiatives such as collecting rain water on roofs to flush toilets.
More than 800,000 tons of soil -- enough to fill the Royal Albert Hall nine times -- had to be taken away while 33 buildings on the site had to be demolished before construction could begin.
An extra 3 million journeys are expected to be made on London’s already creaking public transport system during the busiest days of the Games.
Around 4,000 trees will be planted in the Olympic Park and Olympic Village by the time the Games begin. Queen Elizabeth planted the first tree in October 2009.
International Broadcast Centre, the main press building in the Olympic Park, is the size of six football pitches and will be a 24-hour media hub for around 20,000 broadcasters, photographers and journalists.
The Olympic Stadium is the lightest Olympic arena ever built, using around 10,000 tons of steel.
Once the Games have finished, the sports equipment used will be donated to various charities.

London 2012 : Cultural


Cultural Olympics

London 2012 FestivalThe Games are a perfect opportunity to see some British achievements of a cerebral kind too.
Running alongside the Games, the London 2012 Festival, which begins on Midsummer's Day (June 21) and carries on all the way until the end of the Paralympic Games (September 9), is billed as the most ambitious cultural program to take place in our lifetime.
On top of what London already has to offer, the 12-week program brings together more than 1,000 arty, musical, theatrical and cultural events.
It features live music sets and the silent films of Alfred Hitchcock, exhibitions from leading artists including Damien Hirst, new theater commissions and free performances with Damon Albarn, Cate Blanchett, Tracey Emin, Jude Law, Mike Leigh and Leona Lewis all set to appear in various guises.
Below is a pick of the best of what is on offer as part of the London 2012 Festival. Full details of each event and booking information can be found at www.london2012.com.
Damien Hirst Exhibition
Damien HirstDoes 1991 still count as "modern"?

The artist who gave the world a cow's head being eaten by flies is to have his work -- which now spans 20 years -- showcased at the Tate Modern.
The exhibition will include iconic sculptures from his Natural History series, including The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living 1991, in which he suspended a shark in formaldehyde.
April 4–September 9, Tate Modern, £13.50-£15.50, www.tate.org.uk
Festival of the World
Festival of the WorldFestival of the World-Rainbow Park, a multicoloured sand installation by Adam Kainowski.
Festival of the World opens just in time for the Diamond Jubilee bank holiday weekend and continues until the final day of the Paralympic Games.
Inspired by the cultural vision of Baron Pierre de Coubertin (1863–1937), founder of the modern Olympic movement, the Southbank Centre will be transformed into an international learning site to include art, music, comedy, markets and free events.
June 1–September 9, Southbank Centre, www.world.southbankcentre.co.uk
The Yoko Ono Exhibition
Yoko OnoInstallation "Play It By Trust."
Her first exhibition in a London public institution for more than a decade, Ono will present new and existing works, some of which have rarely been shown in Britain.
These will include installations, films and performances, as well as architectural alterations to the galleries.
June 19-September 9, Serpentine Gallery, free, www.serpentinegallery.org
You Me Bum Bum Train
WharfWeird title, great show.

Award-winning interactive show "You Me Bum Bum Train" is returning to London as part of The Barbican’s contribution to the Cultural Olympiad.
In previous shows participants have sparred in a boxing match, delivered a church sermon and burgled a house.
Last year’s event, which was staged at the LEB building in Bethnal Green, won the Evening Standard Award for Outstanding Newcomer.
June 21-August 26, Secret location in Canary Wharf, £20, www.bumbumtrain.co.uk
The Genius of Hitchcock
HitchcockThe horror auteur examined and explained.
Alfred Hitchcock’s early British movie masterpieces will be restored to their former glory and presented in a series of one-off screenings across London with live music.
As part of the London 2012 Festival, Hitchcock's surviving silent films will be screened with new scores by composers including Nitin Sawhney and Daniel Cohen.
June 28–July 21, Wilton’s Music Hall/BFI, free, www.explore.bfi.org.uk
Shakespeare Exhibition
ShakespeareBig Bill as you've never seen him.

Providing a unique insight into both the playwright and his adoptive city of London, the British Museum invites visitors to step back in time to 1612 and experience life as Shakespeare and his contemporaries would have known it.
July 19- November 25, British Museum, www.britishmuseum.org
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time
The curious incident of the dog in the night-timeA simple tale told beautifully.
Adapted for the stage by award winning playwright Simon Stephens, the production of "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night" at the National Theatre retells the story of autistic 15-year-old Christopher Boone, who sets out to solve the mysterious death of Wellington, his neighbor's large black poodle.
The production is directed by Marianne Elliott and features a cast of well known actors, including Una Stubbs.
July, National Theatre, www.nationaltheatre.org.uk

Getting Out of London


Getting out of London

Getting out There's much more to see in the British Isles than London.
It is likely that paying double the usual price for your room, queuing for 20 minutes to get into the restaurant of your choice, or having to squeeze yourself onto London’s public transport system could leave you wanting some much needed time away from the capital.
Fortunately, there are many great places to visit that are less than 90 minutes away from London by train with Bath, Brighton and Cambridge being the pick of the bunch.
Alternative Olympics
Alternative OlympicsNow this looks like an event worth watching.
If the Olympics just feel a little too serious for you, or you just loathe Spandex, then a slightly more laid-back alternative to the Games is to be staged in Wales thanks to a Welsh Government grant of £50,000.
The World Alternative Games in Llanwrtyd Wells (some five hours from London by train) will feature "sports" such as underwater rugby, wife carrying, snail racing and jousting.
Other events planned include black pudding throwing -- during which competitors throw black puddings in order to try to dislodge Yorkshire Puddings from a plinth -- and extreme ironing, which “combines the thrills of an extreme outdoor activity with the satisfaction of a well-pressed shirt.” (more details, as well as hotel listings, can be found at www.llanwrtyd.com)
Or there's the Olimpick Shin-Kicking contest on June 1 at Dover Hill in Gloucestershire, the WorldEgg Throwing Championships in Swaton in Lincolnshire on June 24, and the World Pea Shooting Championships in Witcham in Cambridgeshire on July 14.
If you can lengthen your stay in the United Kingdom, the annual World Toe Wrestling Championships takes place in Ashbourne in Derbyshire on August 25. The idea was conceived in 1976 in -- surprise, surprise -- a pub.
Bath
Bath, EnglandBath -- small enough to love, big enough to enjoy.
Listed as a World Heritage City, Bath is 80 minutes away from London by train from Paddington Station. Famous residents have included Jane Austen and the "must-sees" of the city include the Roman baths, Pulteney Bridge, the Circus and the Royal Crescent. (www.visitbath.co.uk)
Recommended places for lunch include Sotto Sotto, just a few steps away from the Roman baths (10 North Parade; +44 (0)1225 330236; www.sottosotto.co.uk), and The Chequers, a short walk from the Royal Crescent (50 Rivers St.; +44 (0)1225 360017; www.thechequersbath.com).
Brighton
BrightonKind of like a colorful, camp, London II.
An hour away by train from Victoria Station, Brighton is one of Britain’s best seaside towns. Key draws include the Royal Pavilion, the Regency architecture, the Brighton Pier and the boutique shops of the Lanes. (www.visitbrighton.com)
Recommended spots for a bite to eat include vegetarian restaurant Terre à Terre (71 East St.; +44 (0)1273 729051; www.terreaterre.co.uk), and English's, which has been frequented by the likes of Charlie Chaplin, Dame Judy Dench, Tony Blair and Charlton Heston (29-31 East St.; +44 (0)1273 327980; www.englishs.co.uk)
Cambridge
CambridgeWhere there is a top university there are students, and where there are students there are great pubs.
An hour from London by train from King’s Cross or Liverpool Street station, Cambridge revolves around its world-renowned university with reminders of this at every turn. The beautiful college buildings, students on bicycles and punts along the River Cam all contribute to its charm. (www.visitcambridge.org)
Recommended places for lunch include Browns (23 Trumpington St.; +44 (0)1223 461 655;www.browns-restaurants.co.uk), and The Cambridge Chop House with its traditional British fare (1 Kings Parade; +44 (0)1223 312817; www.cambridgechophouse.co.uk)