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Posts Tagged ‘london move’

London Relocation’s Property Tip-o-the-Day

Monday, August 9th, 2010

Now, I might sound like I’m stating the obvious, but there are certainly plenty of people moving to London who would benefit from following this advice as they schedule when to property-search:

The sooner the better.

That’s right.  Especially now with the summer rush to snatch up reasonably priced properties, you’ll want to get the head start.  Generally, in this local property market, you can secure your London flat up to 6 weeks in advance.  So, if you can look this far ahead, please do.  Otherwise, last-minute finds may only stay on the shelves within 24-48 hours of your viewing them, leaving you little time to search for other properties as a basis of comparison to feel confident in your decision.

That’s why when you employ an accredited relocation specialist like London Relocation Ltd., you will see around 20 properties to show you the full spectrum of what’s out there in your desired area and price-range.  You can feel secure that deciding within a day or two is not a rushed judgment, as we will also educate you before and during that viewing day to better inform your choice.  Never to fear, though, if you don’t have that much lead time.  It can make for sparser pickings, but that’s why we’re here—to optimize your findings.

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I Want My UKTV

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

If you expect to be moving to London by January 2011 and already fancy UK television, might you be interested in attending the National Television Awards?  It’s like the Emmys for the UK TV community, and you can be there to see the celebrities live on 16 January 2011!

Why do I mention this now already?  If you’ve just made the London move or are already here and are/will become an O2 customer for your UK phone service, priority tickets are available to you through tomorrow, 6 August, or until tickets sell out.

Missing British TV from your previous travels abroad, or are you not yet familiar?  You can do your homework prior to your London relocation by subscribing to a UK TV-abroad service that is accessible online.  A simple Google search yields an array of options, among them:  The Telly, My Expat Network, and View TV Abroad.  You’ll have to shop around for pricing plans and quality of streaming.  I’m curious, have any of you tried a service like this?  Does anyone have a recommendation? I haven’t used one of these myself, so can’t personally vouch, but I already know I’ll be wanting to subscribe when that day comes to move back to the States from London.

You can also keep current through the stations’ own websites, like BBC, ITV, Living, and UKTV (which encompasses Blighty, Eden, Alibi, Dave, etc. channels).  And I *heart* Anglotopia‘s faithful following of British TV—”Doctor Who” even has its own section on the main page.

My top UK TV guilty pleasures?  Top Gear, Coach Trip, and Dragon’s Den.

So welcome to the land that brought us classic entertainment like “Benny Hill” and “Monty Python” and that inspired America’s own hits like “The Office,” “Dancing With the Stars” (called “Strictly Come Dancing” here),  “American Idol” (the “X Factor”), and countless other predominantly reality/game shows—on my recent visit home to the States, I saw that “Dating in the Dark” and “Four Weddings” are among the newer ones to move Stateside.  People tend to join one camp or another depending on whether they prefer the British originals to the U.S. copycats, but I personally embrace both and appreciate them for their differences (though I will not forgive “Shark Tank” for bastardizing one of my beloved Top 3.  Not sad to hear that one’s cancelled already).  If you’re on Team America in this debate, never fear—most U.S. shows air over here, too.  We might range from a couple weeks to an entire season behind, but we do get them.

Whatever you may watch, London Relocation Ltd. will find you the perfect living room to plug in your TV :)

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London Locations: The Sea Clocks at Greenwich’s Maritime Museum

Friday, July 30th, 2010

Just over a year ago when chilling in a hostel in Pula, Croatia, a friend lent me a book:  LongitudeCool, I thought, seeing it simply as something that would help me pass the time as I laid around on the beach.  A literary dork, I don’t often read nonfiction, so I was surprised how much I ended up enjoying this story of sea clocks that I read through as quickly as I would have a novel.  If you have the slightest interest in British history, seafaring, navigation, clocks, or astronomy, I cannot recommend it enough.

To get on with it, the book chronicles John Harrison‘s journey toward solving the problem of longitude.  We take for granted the globes we’ve grown up with that are stratified by their degrees in both longitude and latitude, never really thinking about what mankind had to undergo to come up with this.  How on Earth did they figure this out way back before today’s technology?  The problem was so dire that, in 1714, the British Parliament offered a monetary prize of £20,000 (worth millions in today’s terms) to whomever could solve it.

As Harrison (a self-taught clockmaker by trade) determined that being able to accurately track time was at the crux of the matter (such that the local time of a destination could be compared with a basis such as Greenwich Mean Time), what was needed was an accurate clock.  Sounds easier to us than what the issue really was at the time.  In the 18th century, clocks didn’t exist that could keep ticking with accuracy for a long duration of time, and certainly not against conditions at sea of varying temperature, moisture, and pressure.  And so, Harrison proceeded to build his clock, refining it through 5 different versions for over 4 decades of his life, all the while running neck and neck with competing clocks and the other dominant school of thought, astronomy (which relied on the stars as a measure of position…which works great until it gets cloudy!).  It’s a fascinating story of dedication and precision and such a testament to man’s perseverance and innovation.

Harrison’s “H5,” is located in the Worshipful Company of Clockmakers‘ collection in London.  H1 through H4 of the sea clocks (technically referred to as “chronometers”) are on display and still tickin’ in the National Maritime Museum‘s Royal Observatory in Greenwich, where time begins :)

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London Calling

Monday, July 19th, 2010

RRRRRRRING!!!  RRRRRRRING!!!!

“London Relocation—this is Colleen.”

“Yeah, hi.  I’ve got your London Relocation blog on the other line.”

“Our blog?”

“Yes.  It’s our understanding that you just flew in this morning from Chicago on an overnight flight and are operating on little to no sleep, so it called and said it wants its remotely useful content  back.”

“Ah!  Yes, yes that’s good of you to ring.  But unfortunately I cannot accommodate that request at this time.  Please hold…”

It’s my day to truly PHONE IT IN, after all.

But a word of advice if you’re relocating to London from a timezone several hours behind:  Overnight flights into London will get you over the jet-lag faster if you can limit yourself to a short nap and power through until a normal bedtime that first night.  Such is what I’m presently doing, which is putting my five functioning brain cells  into overdrive, but will encourage them to prosper all the better by tomorrow, when I will hopefully have some semblance of an informative blog post to share, derrr… :)   In any case, if you’re making the flight from a time zone several hours ahead instead, schedule a late-afternoon/early-evening flight that will get you here in the evening so you only have a few hours to wait before getting to tuck yourself into bed for the night.  Either way, any naps that you find necessary during the subsequent day should be limited to no more than 2 hours; otherwise, you’ll sabotage your overnight sleep and require more days to acclimate to the local time.

In the meantime, I’m off to get that nap in so my brain will no longer be left off the hook…Happy Monday!

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London Summer Event: Cartier Polo

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

July 25th brings us a posh English event straight out of Pretty Woman (as an aside, I saw a woman walking down Kensington High Street last week in that exact same polka-dot dress. Timeless, I suppose…).  From the Guards Polo Club website:

“Cartier International Day, in association with the Hurlingham Polo Association, is the world’s greatest spectator polo day. The main highlight of the day is the afternoon match for the Coronation Cup, which features the very best English players. [...]

Action on the field is not confined to the afternoon though. Talented and up and coming England players will take to the field at 11am to play for the Golden Jubilee Trophy. As the standard of polo is now so high in the UK, this game is the perfect opening for the England International later in the afternoon.

However, Cartier International Day is so much more than polo. Cartier entertains some 600 guests from the world of stage, screen, literature and fashion over a gourmet lunch prepared by Anton Mosimann. All visitors can have the opportunity to visit the unique and extensive Retail Village which offers everything from a cooling glass of champagne to a luxury dog bed; from a beautiful polo painting to the very latest Audi.”

There are assorted full-day itinerary packages that you can purchase through different organizations that will offer morning and afternoon food, cocktails, etc. (such as the Chinawhite package referenced on the Guards Polo Club website)–simply run a Google search for the event to explore the possibilities!

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Reading the Signs

Monday, July 12th, 2010

This guest post comes to us compliments of one of our fabulous London Living Londonistas, Emily, who maintains her own fun and quirky blog on the life of an American expat at Redenni in Wellies.

I believe the signs have a lot to say about the UK and what it has to offer as a host country.

You aren’t here long of course before you notice these. Surely, they aren’t intended for the locals; they must know when to look left. The government seems to be investing serious resources in looking out for our survival. I think it’s sweet that they don’t want us to die.

This one really made me giggle. How slow? Do they want me to drive as if I were dead? But that would be a stop, wouldn’t it? It’s on the verge of being oxymoronic. At least unlikely. I like that I live somewhere where they’re not afraid to make bold adverb choices.

So after admitting me without cost to Tate Modern, they take the time to keep me abreast of their lighting situation and apologize for any potential disappointment. That’s charming. I was in another museum that apologized that a certain display was missing a fish. Here it is.

They clearly care about my satisfaction and hate to see me disappointed or inconvenienced. I’ve never been so overwhelmed by politeness.

Nor have I ever been so tickled by a subordinate clause. This sign in Canterbury doesn’t really rule out drinking; it just seems to say that it’s fine to drink unless you’re such a joker that you attract the attention of the cops and they tell you that you can’t. Message received: Be cool.

And I love spotting ghost signs. Seeing faded, hand-painted advertisements never fails to remind me that I live in a place oozing with charm and history and that I really have to pay attention to appreciate it.

Ha!  Thank you, Emily!  I’ve never giggled so much posting on this blog…you’re a great wit, girl.

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O Beautiful For Spacious Skies, For Amber Pints of Ale…

Monday, July 5th, 2010

Uuuggghhh…it is brutal being an American in London the day after the 4th of July, when said 4th of July does not fall on a Friday or Saturday, but on a Sunday with no day off on Monday.  It hurts, people.

But hurts oh so good.  Yesterday we enjoyed an absolutely lovely American-style picnic in an English garden.  Of all places to celebrate a nation’s independence, we were brimming with the irony of doing so in the former Motherland…one gets torn whether that’s a disrespectful thing to do, but if there’s one thing I assert as an expat, it’s that living in one country and loving it does not require you to forego your allegiance to your own.  There are certainly expats who have moved here for the very reason that they’ve renounced their country, but it’s certainly not the case with probably a majority of us.  Rather, it’s more out of an open-mindedness to experience another culture and understand its perspectives, and thereby modify or validate the perspectives we already hold.

One question I’m often asked is whether there is an obvious anti-American sentiment here.  Well, it’s not something that trickles down much to the individual level—people of other nationalities are always lovely to me and might only tease my heritage in good fun—but there’s indeed no end to the sweeping judgments placed on the nation overall.  And perhaps that’s inevitable and all countries are victims of it.  Opinions are easily and understandably formed based on high-maintenance tourists, media representation, and the American television series that are aired here, yet I cringe at the possibility that the Kardashians could be remotely viewed as representative of over 300 million people—when I substitute-taught here for a few weeks last year, one of my teenage students, on confirming that I was American, asked me if I knew Lauren from “The Hills.”  Unfortunately, I had also already confirmed that I’m from Chicago, so when its lack of geographic proximity to Southern California doesn’t register, it does make me ponder why Americans are popularly given a hard time for not knowing precise locations of other countries—I wonder that foreigners could identify the locations of individual states any better…all 50 of ‘em.  Yet those who have visited the U.S. typically only know 4 best:  New York (NYC), Florida (Miami/Orlando), California (LA), and Nevada (Vegas), and I find it an absolute shame the Midwest just gets flown over when it contains some of the most down-to-earth, good-hearted citizens with solid values.  Not that the coasts don’t, of course!  It’s just that there is a range of regional cultures in the U.S. itself that does not tend to be acknowledged.

I’m by no means trying to reverse-bash here, just noting a dash of hypocrisy in common criticisms, and I address it now merely as an aspect of the London expat experience.  I personally prefer to judge people as individuals, not by stereotypes, and would find it peachy if we could all just get along :)  

And I’m not alone.  Before I moved to London, I read a book by Bronwen Maddox that caught my eye precisely because I was about to leave my Stars and Stripes for the Union Jack:   In Defense of America.  A half-British, half-American journalist, Maddox grew up in America and now lives in the UK, where she confronts misconceptions on a daily basis, and this book was her response.  It does not set out to tout the superiority of the U.S. or anything of the sort; it simply offers some background on the nation’s founding principles and what makes it tick to aid understanding of where its policies and people are coming from.  It also does not make excuses; like any other nation, there is much America can do to improve, and she offers advice on this as well.  Anyways, I’m not going to hop on a soap box here; I just found it an interesting read (as balanced as the author’s dual citizenship) and recommend it to any American expat who may time-to-time feel misunderstood.

Regardless, I celebrate the greatness of the nation that I presently live in and appreciate the opportunities it has provided my husband and I thus far.  We have felt welcome since the moment we set foot on UK soil and hope we’re doing our part to contribute to the fantastically diverse London community!

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Americans Moving to London – Finding the U.S. in the UK (Part 2 of 3)

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

(This excerpt previously appeared in my 17 May guest post on Anglotopia.net, a brilliant, comprehensive resource on all things UK that I highly recommend to all Anglophiles!)

Continuing from my previous post on where Americans tend to gravitate in London, today I bring you:

South Kensington

Central to London is the neighborhood of South Kensington, an affluent postcode that is home to a substantial American population.  The area bears a similar aesthetic to trendy U.S. neighbourhoods like Lincoln Park in Chicago or New York’s SoHo or Upper West Side and, like Notting Hill, is a cornucopia of shopping and dining.

Gloucester Road is among many venue-lined roads and is home to one particular grocery store that has become a guilty pleasure (if not a staple) for many-an American expat:  Partridges.  For as many American brands (or decent-enough equivalents) that can be found in UK stores, there are many good ol’ standbys that are rare in these here parts, so it’s key to have an oasis of American goods to satisfy that occasional craving for pancakes and Kraft Macaroni & Cheese!  And for more upscale shopping, South Kensington is only a few minutes’ walk from its opulent and pricier neighbor, Knightsbridge, which houses the likes of Harrods.

With the Victoria & Albert and Natural History museums, as well as concerts at the Royal Albert Hall, South Kensington also provides a convenient dosage of British history and culture to immerse expats in their new country.

To be concluded in our next post

(This excerpt previously appeared in my 17 May guest post on Anglotopia.net)

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Americans Moving to London – Finding the U.S. in the UK (Part 1 of 3)

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

(This excerpt previously appeared in my 17 May guest post on Anglotopia.net, a brilliant, comprehensive resource on all things UK that I highly recommend to all Anglophiles!)

As an American-owned and operated agency, we field a lot of enquiries from North Americans looking to make the big transatlantic move to the United Kingdom.  A big part of the job is managing expectations, as, for as much as expatriates are seeking change in a new culture, it’s only that natural that they also seek a degree of familiarity with what they already know.  We can’t perform architectural miracles that increase the square-footage and closet space of these predominantly Victorian-era buildings to meet modern American proportions; nonetheless, we can advise on which neighborhoods have a solid American demographic by virtue of other appealing factors.  Generally, American expats dig London’s West side, so we’ll start this series with the neighborhood where our friendly lil’ office is located:

Notting Hill

No joking, this neighborhood continues to be a draw for Americans because of the Hugh Grant film of same name.  There is a comfort to coming to Notting Hill from abroad thanks to a ready familiarity with the charms of Portobello Road as it’s portrayed in the movie.  Bedecked in antique shops, fashion boutiques, pubs, cafes, and street stalls overflowing with produce, this colorful strip contains all the quaint appeal that Americans expect from London.

The amenities don’t stop at Portobello, however; indeed, the entire area is dotted with day and night-life amidst quiet residential streets that provide a nice escape from the city-center bustle and is close to green space like Kensington Gardens.  The neighborhood’s Westbourne Grove has been nicknamed “Rodeo Drive” by residents for its posh clothing shops, and, overall, residences are well-maintained to an American standard.

To be continued in our next post

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World Cup Weekend

Friday, June 25th, 2010

There’s no way for me to hide how not focused I am right now on yet another gorgeous, warm day in London, so I’m going to keep this one simple.

For things to do this weekend, watching the World Cup is a highlight for the locals, so if you’re not in South Africa among the lucky fans whose ears are bleeding from vuvuzelas by now, here are a couple places to search what London locations might be broadcasting your match of interest:

http://www.londontown.com/London/World-Cup-2010-Where-to-watch-in-London

http://worldcup.youngs.co.uk/findyourpub

Have access to a computer, but not a TV?  Watch online:  http://www.tvchannelsfree.com/watch-live-events/77/USA-Vs-Ghana.html

Otherwise, avoiding the crowds and stocking your fridge with a few icy brews so you can watch at home is not too shabby an idea either.  If London Relocation Ltd. placed you there, it must be a nice one to cozy up in :)

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