What do you folks
do for entertainment
round these parts?
100 Wardour St

On the Soho site of the legendary Marquee Club, where artists including David Bowie and the Rolling Stones once performed, 100 Wardour Street operated as a restaurant, bar and live music venue at the heart of London's entertainment district. The address also previously housed Terence Conran's Mezzo and the Cuban venue Floridita, giving it a deep pedigree in Soho's nightlife and dining scene. The venue was arranged over two levels. A ground-floor bar and lounge centred on a striking feature bar .....

194 Piccadilly

Occupying lower floors of the building that houses the British Academy of Film and Television Arts on Piccadilly, 194 Piccadilly is a multi-purpose events and entertainment space in the West End of London. Operating in part under the name Neon 194, it runs as a bar and cafe by day and a ballroom and club space by night, with a capacity in the region of 400 across its main room. The address shares its home with BAFTA's headquarters at 195 Piccadilly, a building that has hosted screenings and cer.....

229   London

229 is a multi-purpose live-music and events venue at 229 Great Portland Street in central London, a short walk from Great Portland Street and Regent's Park. Launched in April 2007 after a major refurbishment, it has established itself as one of the capital's leading mid-sized music venues, presenting touring bands, club nights, and a wide range of private and cultural events. The venue is built around two performance spaces. The main room, Venue 1, has a standing capacity of around 620 (with s.....

229 London

229 is a multi-purpose live-music and events venue at 229 Great Portland Street in central London, a short walk from Great Portland Street and Regent's Park. Launched in April 2007 after a major refurbishment, it has established itself as one of the capital's leading mid-sized music venues, presenting touring bands, club nights, and a wide range of private and cultural events. The venue is built around two performance spaces. The main room, Venue 1, has a standing capacity of around 620 (with s.....

Abbey Road

Immortalised on the cover of one of the most famous albums in popular music, the zebra crossing on Abbey Road in the St John's Wood area of north-west London has become an unlikely place of pilgrimage for fans from across the world. The photograph that made it famous was taken in August 1969 and shows the four members of the Beatles striding across the road in single file, a deceptively simple image that became the sleeve of the album that took the street's name. Ever since, visitors have come t.....

Abbey Road Studios

Abbey Road Studios, housed in a Georgian townhouse in the St John's Wood district of London, is among the most famous recording facilities in the world, its reputation forged by the extraordinary roster of musicians who have worked within its walls. Opened in 1931 by the Gramophone Company, the studios were originally a centre for classical recording, and the composer Edward Elgar conducted at the opening session. Their global fame, however, rests above all on their association with the Beatles.....

ActOne Cinema

Housed in the restored Passmore Edwards Old Library on Acton High Street, ActOne is an independent, non-profit community cinema run by a Community Interest Company. The historic building, gifted to the people of Acton and left empty for years, was brought back into use by a group of residents who campaigned to keep developers out and return it to its original role as a community hub. After the lease was signed with the London Borough of Ealing in 2021, a team of more than a hundred volunteers c.....

Alexandra Road Park

Tucked beside one of the most admired pieces of post-war public housing in Britain, Alexandra Road Park in the Camden district of London is a rare example of a modernist designed landscape created as an integral part of a residential estate. It was laid out in the 1970s to accompany the Alexandra Road Estate, a striking development of stepped concrete terraces designed by the architect Neave Brown, and the park was conceived not as an afterthought but as a deliberate green heart for the new comm.....

Apollo Victoria Theatre

Opened on 15 October 1930 as the New Victoria, this West End theatre on Wilton Road began life as a lavish super cinema during the great age of the picture palace. It was designed by Ernest Wamsley Lewis and W. E. Trent for Provincial Cinematograph Theatres, with an Art Deco interior themed around an undersea world of shell-shaped lights and wave-like plasterwork. The building occupies an awkward triangular site between Wilton Road and Vauxhall Bridge Road, which gave it two almost identical fr.....

Apsley House

Standing in isolated grandeur at Hyde Park Corner, Apsley House was once so prominently the first building travellers reached on entering London from the west that it earned the simple address Number One London. Built in the 1770s to designs by Robert Adam and later remodelled and faced in Bath stone, the mansion is famous as the London home of Arthur Wellesley, the first Duke of Wellington, the soldier and statesman who defeated Napoleon at Waterloo and twice served as prime minister. The hous.....