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    Recommended Reviews - The Prime Meridian

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    March 2024.... Time is on our side
    Lisa E.

    Very cool to be able to see & stand on.. We took the Uber boat, actually we purchased the All Day Uber pass and went up and down the Thames all afternoon & night..but it took us to Greenwich, and we followed the instructions on Tiktok to walk all the way up the path to the left before getting to the top of the fairly steep hill to enter the Royal Observatory...so you take that off shoot left and soon you pass a small garden on your right, keep walking. You will see folks photographing the Prime Meridian against the brick wall, no need to pay to go inside and be on the inner garden where the line runs. Also a lovely view of the city.. A very nice walk up & experience, highly recommend..

    Marker
    David S.

    The thing with this line is that it is quite arbitrary, which probably shouldn't surprise anybody that knows anything about lines on the map. However, what it does mean is that we have pretty much standardised our system of time, which honestly wasn't really all that important until we could actually travel quite fast, which in the grand scheme of things, wasn't all that long ago. Still, this is located near the Royal Astronomy, which I suspect was here because at the time it was nowhere near the lights of London. Oh, and the view from the hill isn't bad at all either.

    Angela D.

    The Prime Meridian is a very interesting place. It is in Greenwich and is 0 degrees latitude, longitude and is where time is calculated. Being at the 0, 0 , 0 point is pretty cool. There is a fairly steep walk up to the Royal Observatory which is where the Prime Meridian is. If you enter from the Town Square, just walk straight up the hill and when you come to a fork in the rode, turn to the left and the Observatory and Prime Meridian are at the end. There wasn't much of a line to get in and the tickets were around 15 pounds. There was a line to actually stand on the meridian and take pictures but overall it moved pretty quick. The grounds are very pretty and there are great views from the top. Inside is a museum with telescopes that had been used and galleries about the men who have discovered the meridians. If you don't want to pay and do not care about the museum or gift shop, there is a smaller marker for the Prime Meridian outside the gates that you can visit for free. Overall it was a pretty cool experience and I would recommend a visit.

    Paul T.

    What a great place to visit. Where in the world can you stand in both hemispheres knowingly?? HERE! The toughest part is getting to the observatory. It's a long ways from Central London by train. Then you walk several blocks to the observation grounds. Where there is a large part to sit and relax and also a small Castle at the lower part of the woods. But then you have to travel atleast a mile, mostly uphill with a long winding stairway that takes you to the entrance The good thing is that they are a part of the explorer pass. Pay one price get 3-5 exhibits included for a reasonable price. We got an Express pass, so we were able to skip part of the line and go straight to the prime meridian line. I loved the view but my pregnant wife was not so thrilled with the adventure of getting there

    Elethia M.

    Dragged by husband to tourist trap they called the Prime Meridian. I almost didn't make it considering I was 5 months pregnant and being dragged up a ginormous hill of steps to see a visible line of the Prime Meridian. Because we had a package deal it included tickets to get in to see the line. The line itself looked like a metal track on the railway except it was flattened into the ground. At first it was a bit hard to see especially if you're looking for your state but eventually you find your home town as you pushed through the crowd. If you see a line forming to take pictures at the Prime Meridian line just walk around those folks. The staff will even tell you there's no official line to see the "line" ... its probably something tourist do out of habit, who knows. The observatory, depending on your interest can vary. Most of the places there either have a long line or is very tight. The look out point they have past the "line" had a line for days and when you go up to look at the telescope closer where they actually have a guide giving a mini tour but once again it's too small you're basically squishing into a small room with these other strangers silently worrying what the capacity of the room is.

    Emily M.

    This is a self guided walking tour and you go at your own pace. Be prepared to read a lot if you are interested in learning about all the history. It's pretty cool to go to the prime meridian, and you can stand over it to say you are in the eastern and western hemisphere at the same time. They have other stuff here too like the progression of how the clocks were made and time zones. And good scenic for photos. Nice to see once in your life.

    Aug 08
    Cher Â.

    Have you ever wonder what Greenwich Mean Time meant ?(ok UKers we know you know but we are not so smart in the US :) ) Well that is where the Prime Meridian is and you can come here to see where our timezones begin...or something like that. :) Stupid American! LOL!

    Fiona L.

    Have you ever stepped on the line that divides the Earth into the West and East Hemisphere? 0 degree longitude?! Well, here's the chance in this beautiful hill of Greenwich Village in London! Even though it was quite far going to Greenwich Village from Westminster by ferry, it was totally worth! Upon arrival at the dock, we still need to walk thru the town, pass thru the museum, and then hike up the hill to stand on "the line." Yes, in reality it's just a line, but come on, how cool is it to say that you stepped on the Prime Meridian of the Earth!? Not only was there only the Prime Meridian, there were many other landmarks, museums, and the park, such as the Royal Observatory, Planetarium, Maritime Museum, and Greenwich Park to name a few. I specifically enjoyed the park because it's located on a hill, which allows you to get a beautiful view of LONDON city! Very breathtaking! I went there during the day time, but I can imagine how serene and romantic it would be to lie down on the green luscious field while watching the sunsets with its rainbow color skies! Definitely come up to the hill if you decide to visit Greenwich!

    Drew B.

    I first visited the Prime Meridian 30 years ago. While the excellent museum hasn't changed - nor the Royal Observatory's museum and epic view of the city ...what has changed is its popularity. Go early! It's crowded, but worth the price of admission.

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    Review Highlights - The Prime Meridian

    While the excellent museum hasn't changed - nor the Royal Observatory's museum and epic view of the city ...

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    Queen's House - The Great Hall

    Queen's House

    4.4(16 reviews)
    0.4 miGreenwich

    The Queen's House is located near the National Maritime Museum and the Royal Observatory. It is a…read morebeautiful 17th century house that has been home to a number of queens. Again, like most of the London area museums, admission is FREE. We took a self-guided tour of the house. We visited in October (off-season) and the house was not crowded nor did we need tickets in advance. I'd suggest, however, that during the busier summer season you might want to make reservations. The furnishings and art are stunning. The decor is beautiful. We spent about an hour in the Queen's House.

    This isn't the name of a gay nightclub just in case you were wondering. This museum is in Greenwich…read morebetween the ferry pier and the Royal Observatory, and it would be a damn shame if you bypass this gorgeous 17th-century Palladian-style manor. Admission is free, so you really have no excuse. It was originally built as a present from King James I to Danish-born Queen Anne. Apparently the king uttered profanities in front of her when he accidentally shot one of his favorite hunting dogs. Wow, she sounds like a real Meghan Markle. Royal guilt must be in the bloodlines. The resulting house has been refurbished many times over, and it's quite nice with each room featuring a dizzying array of art from traditional portraits of Elizabeth I to an arresting Kehinde Wiley painting called "Ship of Fools" (photo: https://yelp.to/u5cl20xBM2). All the furnishings were impressive, but the architecture is what resonates the most starting with the Great Hall with its geometric black-and-white marble flooring. However, the Tulip Staircase was definitely the main attraction. It was the first geometric self-supporting spiral staircase in Britain and quite the architectural statement...don't you agree? (video: https://yelp.to/wjykuYT3IU) RELATED - Exploring London? Here's my collection of places I've visited and reviewed: https://bit.ly/3zFACrx

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    Queen's House - Tulip Stairs

    Tulip Stairs

    Queen's House - Tulip Stairs

    Tulip Stairs

    Queen's House - Queen's House

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    Queen's House

    Sky Garden - Sky Garden_Yelp_Sanju-2

    Sky Garden

    4.3(350 reviews)
    4.3 miAldgate

    Sky Garden ended up being such a fun experience while we were in London…read more We started at the restaurant on the 27th floor and ordered a bottle of champagne for my friend's birthday. They gave us a really nice birthday discount which was unexpected and appreciated. The service the whole time was fantastic and the views were honestly incredible. After that we went down to the 26th floor and stayed there for a while because the vibe was just really good. Live music, more amazing views, people hanging out and enjoying themselves... it felt very "London night out" in the best way. Touristy? Sure. Worth it? Absolutely. Definitely something I'd recommend making time for if you're visiting London.

    The Sky Garden is an absolute masterclass in how to waste people's time while pretending to run a…read more"reservation system." We had tickets for 12:45. In any remotely competent operation, that means you show up at 12:45 and go inside at 12:45. Not here. Here, your reservation is basically a polite suggestion that no one intends to honor. There is zero clear signage, so instead of simply following directions like a normal human being, you are forced to stand in a line just to ask someone what you are supposed to do. And who is handling this? One single, overwhelmed employee who is somehow responsible for scanning tickets and answering every random walk up question. One person. For a major tourist attraction. It is not just inefficient, it is absurd. After wasting time in that line, you are then sent to another, much longer line. For your "timed entry." So at 12:45, your actual reservation time, you are not entering. You are standing in a slow moving queue wondering why this place even bothers issuing tickets with times on them. Let's call it what it is. If you cannot honor reservation times, do not offer reservations. This system does not manage crowds, it creates them. And here is the part that really pushes it over the edge. We missed another reservation because of this disaster. Not because we were late. Not because we did not plan. But because this place is so poorly organized and so wildly inefficient that it derailed the rest of our day. That is not just annoying, it is completely unacceptable. This is not some small oversight. This is a fundamental failure in basic operations, communication, and respect for visitors' time. It is almost impressive how badly it is handled. By the time you finally get inside, it honestly does not matter how good the view is. The experience has already been ruined by the chaos, the delays, and the sheer incompetence of the system. If you value your time, skip it. Or go in fully expecting your "reservation" to mean nothing and your schedule to take the hit.

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    Sky Garden
    Sky Garden - Me!

    Me!

    Sky Garden - Upstairs bar

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    Upstairs bar

    Crossbones Graveyard

    Crossbones Graveyard

    4.6(5 reviews)
    4.4 miBorough

    This little garden was on a list of strange/offbeat attractions to see on my trip to London because…read moreof the dark history around it. It's basically a garden grown atop a mass grave for poor, unmarried women, sex workers, and children. Small but lovingly cared for by volunteers, it is only open from noon to 3PM on weekdays during the summer. There is some artwork and little memorials. It's a little out of the way, but if you're in the area it's a nice quick stop to pay tribute to the forgotten women and children.

    Another Halloween visit? This one holds a celebration here…read more Cross Bones Graveyard was a mediaeval burial ground, situated in St Saviours parish, now Redcross Way SE1. There is a long established tradition that it was a final resting place for Winchester Geese, ie prostitutes, from the legalised brothels or 'stews' of Bankside. This dates back to the days when the Bishop of Winchester ran Bankside and licensed the Geese. Recent archaeological digs for the Jubilee Line extension have uncovered evidence of a highly overcrowded graveyard where bodies are piled up on top of each other and tests have shown that many of the bodies are women and children with diseases ranging from smallpox, TB and pagets disease to osteoarthritis and vitamin D deficiency. This is Cross Bones, an unconsecrated graveyard going back to medieval times. The Tudor historian John Stow refers to it as a burial ground for 'single women' - a euphemism for the prostitutes who worked in Bankside's legalised brothels or 'stews'. In his 1603 Survey of London, Stow writes: 'I have heard of ancient men, of good credit, report that these single women were forbidden the rites of the church, so long as they continued that sinful life, and were excluded from Christian burial, if they were not reconciled before their death. And therefore there was a plot of ground called the Single Woman's churchyard, appointed for them far from the parish church.' The burial registers of St Saviour's parish don't distinguish between burials in Cross Bones and those in the churchyard adjoining what is now Southwark Cathedral. However, the long-established local tradition - that Cross Bones was a prostitutes' graveyard - is restated in the Annals of St Mary Overy (1833): 'There is an unconsecrated burial ground known as the Cross Bones at the corner of Redcross Street, formerly called the Single Woman's burial ground, which is said to have been used for this purpose' Such women were condemned to be buried in unhallowed ground. Yet many were actually licensed by the church. For some 500 years, the Bishop of Winchester exercised sole authority within Bankside's 'Liberty of The Clink', including the right to licence prostitutes under a Royal Ordinance dating back to 1161. These women became known as 'Winchester Geese'. Cromwell and the Puritans shut down the Bankside pleasure quarter, with its bear-pits, theatres, taverns and stews. By Victorian times, the area around Cross Bones was known as The Mint - an overcrowded, cholera-infested slum, and a notorious thieves quarter. When William Booth was conducting his survey of poverty, his researcher George Duckworth described it as: ' a set of courts and small streets which for number, viciousness, poverty and crowding, is unrivalled in anything I have hitherto seen in London.' Duckworth walked around The Mint with a policeman who told him: 'Police don't go down here unless they have to, and never singly.' Around this time, Cross Bones witnessed many a pauper's burial. It was also the haunt of body-snatchers, seeking specimens for the anatomy classes at nearby Guy's Hospital. The graveyard was finally closed in 1853, on the grounds that it was 'completely overcharged with dead' and that 'further burials' would be 'inconsistent with a due regard for the public health and public decency'. In 1883, it was sold as a building site, prompting Lord Brabazon to write to The Times: ' with a view to save this ground from such desecration, and to retain it as an open space for the use and enjoyment of the people.' (10th November 1883) The following year the sale was declared null and void, under the Disused Burial Grounds Act (1884). Subsequent attempts to develop the site were fiercely resisted by local people. The land was briefly used as a fair-ground until an action was taken against the showmen for abatement of the nuisance caused by steam organs and noisy music. Apart from these minor intrusions, the graveyard slept peacefully and unmolested for the best part of a century. Then, in the 1990s, London Underground built an electricity sub-station to supply power for the Jubilee Line Extension. Prior to the work, Museum of London archaeologists conducted a partial excavation of the site, removing some 148 skeletons. By their own estimate, these represented: 'less than 1% of the total number of burials that were made at this site.' Some were exhibited at the Museum's 1998 London Bodies exhibition, including: ' a young woman's syphilitic skull with multiple erosive lesions, from Red Cross Way, Southwark, 18th century'.' 'For tonight in Hell, they are tolling the bell For the Whore that lay at The Tabard And well we know how the carrion crow Doth feast in our Cross Bones Graveyard.' They have since conducted many rituals and community events at the graveyard. The rituals are simple, inclusive and non-dogmatic, emphasising respect for 'the Ancestors', and honouring the spirit of

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    Crossbones Graveyard
    Crossbones Graveyard
    Crossbones Graveyard

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    Temple of Mithras - Mounted collection of artefacts excavated from the site during its reconstruction and the building of the Bloomberg offices in 2014-16.

    Temple of Mithras

    4.4(5 reviews)
    4.6 miThe City

    In 1954, after the Blitz in London, Roman temple ruins were discovered. The ruins dating to 400…read moreA.D. were painstakingly preserved and studied. Today, this underground museum houses the ruins and artifacts found and is opened free to the public. (The Museum is beneath the Bloomberg Building). We ordered free tickets on line, but most people show up without tickets and get in fine. They run the tours every 20 minutes or so. On ground level is a display of the artifacts found at the site. We were surprised by the sophisticated workmanship. A theater describes the people, temple and their devotion to Mithras, a sun/star-type deity. Visitors descend into the area of the temple ruins and experience a virtual program of the temple as it might have appeared 2000 ago. After the brief program, visitors can walk around and take photos. The museum is remarkably well done and I was fascinated by the experience and thinking about these early inhabitants of the region. The staff is friendly and knowledgeable. Donations are encouraged. Restrooms are available. The entire museum is accessible. Plan a short 30-45 minute visit.

    The Temple of Mithras - known also as the London Mithraeum - are the remains of a temple dedicated…read moreto the Roman god Mithras, in the city of London, underneath an office block built for Bloombergs in 2012-14. During construction, the Temple was moved to its original position and this visitor centre was constrcuted to house it and enable the public to have regular access. The mithraeum was built here, on what were then the banks of the Walbrook river, around AD 240, in the middle of the Roman city of Londinium, which became the site of the present-day London (and of course gave us the city's name). The worshippers in this temple were members of an all-male cult that spread across the Roman Empire in the first four centuries AD. By the later 5th century AD, following the departure of the Roman legions from Britain in 410AD, Londinium had been effectively abandoned, and the temple had been abandoned with it. The site became buried and the medieval and then the modern city of London evolved above. The remains were unearthed during World War II, when bombing destroyed much of the area on and around the site, and a subsequent archaeological excavation here revealed the ruins of a Roman building. The excavation was open to public display and generated a great deal of interest at the time. On the last day of the excavation, a sculpted head of the god Mithras was uncovered, confirming the identity of the building as a mithraeum. In response to public interest, the temple remains were dismantled and reassembled nearby, and remained on view until the early 2000s. The redevelopment of the site has enabled the temple to be returned to its original location, and additional remains were also found. It was decided at the time that the remains should form part of a small museum open to the public, providing interpretation of the site. This has included the development of a multi-media interpretation in which light and sounds are used to give an impression of the building as it was originally constructed and used. You enter at ground level, where this is a display of some of the many and impressive objects discovered during the 2012-14 excavation. Sadly, the interpretation is rather limited, but they includes coins, surgical and grooming instruments, pottery, keys, jewellery, footwear, a paddle and even (rare) surviving part of a Roman panelled door. (It's actually an impressive collection of everyday objects that would be very welcome in any museum.) You then descend to a lower floor where there is an audio loop about the site and the cult of Mithras, and some more limited interpretation on interactive computer screens. This is interesting but there need to be more screens for the number of people visiting. (You had to queue up to read them.) Then, every 20 minutes, access is provided to the remains of the temple itself, where there is a sound and light show. We also found this a bit disappointing: it would have been an ideal opportunity to explain all about the building and how it was used, instead of which everything was focused on creating "atmosphere". But visitors are able to remain behind for a short while to take photographs. So all in all, an interesting diversion for 30 minutes, but it could have been better presented. Entrance is free, but it is best to book as space is limited and entry is controlled to 44 people an hour (11 people every 15 minutes). Access is via stairs or a lift to all floors (but the main entrance door is not automatic). There are toilets. Note the light show includes periods of very low lighting and rumbling noise, so may not suit everyone.

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    Temple of Mithras - Artifacts found at the site

    Artifacts found at the site

    Temple of Mithras - Art in the lobby

    Art in the lobby

    Temple of Mithras

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    The Prime Meridian - landmarks - Updated May 2026

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