I can’t believe it’s been a whole year since London Open House was on. Every year, different buildings around London open up their doors to welcome the public with most of them being free. Some are worth applying in advance for, ushering limited numbers of people around, whilst others you can only turn up on the day, and practice your British queuing skills with all the other people.
This year, the whole weekend was planned out but I’ll share some of the highlights with you and I visited far too many sites worth mentioning. Saturday’s highlight was the OXO tower, one that you could only turn up on the day to book a tour given each hour. With only 18 people allowed each hour, it was definitely worth waiting the hour before the first tour began.
The Coin Street Community Builders, responsible for the entire site were kind enough to at least collect the names and contact details for the huge volume of people they ended up turning away. The start of the tour begins on the ground level where you collect your hard hat and they give you instructions about how things to watch out for and the plan for the hour. We’re instructed to take the lift to top, where the Harvey Nichols Restaurant sits before we duck into a small door to take the, normally, restricted access door to an even smaller set of stairs where it’s obvious the hard hats are needed.
We stopped at the various different floors on the way up, stopping at each O-X-O before emerging at the top where you get an amazing view of the surrounding area. We were so high that we towered over the rest of the diners enjoying their river front views (pictured below).
Day 2 started with another queuing experience at the Horse Guards near Buckingham Palace. We waited much longer than we did at pretty much any other venue but it was definitely worth the wait with a great story lead by one of the members of the First Guard walking us through the different rooms.
I also really enjoyed your time visiting City Hall, namely because for the time invested queueing to get through security granted you access to some great views, a wonderful building to walk through without feeling overly crammed or rushed. Below is the cool staircases you got to walk down at the end of the tour.
Other places we visited included Royal Albert Hall, BFI Imax, the Channel Four building, and the Treasury Building.