Bookmark and Share

Call now and speak to us!

canadian_flag canadian_flag
Toll Free
canadian_flag  
Direct 0207 313 4580
14-16 Westbourne Grove
London W2 5RH
London Time: 00/00/00 00:00:00 am

Posts Tagged ‘Royal Albert Hall’

Relocating to London UK – What’s on in London this Month

Thursday, September 8th, 2011
The Royal Albert Hall, London, England shown d...

London events for September 2011 include the ongoing BBC Proms, which wrap up this week - Relocation UK - Image via Wikipedia

Author:  Colleen

If you’ve been planning an international relocation to London for 2011, can you believe it’s September already??!! Me neither. Well, if you’ve indeed already made the London move by this summer, then all hassle of finding and settling into a London apartment is hopefully behind you now (well, not at all a “hassle” if you wisely used London Relocation’s services and were hand-held through every step by one of our relocation agents). In that event, here are some goings-on around the city of London this fine month that you can finally step out and enjoy!

This Saturday, 10 September, alone has a handful of events:

BBC Proms in the Park – The BBC Proms have been going on ever since 15 July over at South Kensington’s Royal Albert Hall. The final performance this Saturday will be broadcast on giant screens in the nearby Hyde Park to accommodate a larger viewing public. (for more infowww.bbc.co.uk/proms)

The Mayor’s Thames Festival – In celebration of London and the River Thames, the Mayor is hosting this annual festival, the largest of its kind in the city. It includes everything from arts, music, dancing, food, fireworks, and other entertainment, a good time for singles and families alike joining to pay homage to London’s history, present, and future. (for more infowww.thamesfestival.org)

Gail’s Garden Party – If the little foodie in you is craving good eats in one of the loveliest London neighborhoods, this Hampstead food festival is in the spirit of bringing the community together and supporting local high street butchers, fishmongers, green grocers, and cheesemongers. A time for coming together and interacting, with music and facepainting to boot! (for more infowww.gailsbread.co.uk)

To follow later in the month…

Wednesday, 21 September – Sunday, 25 September:

The Chelsea Antiques Fair – A boutique-style fair of 36 vendors held in the Chelsea neighborhood‘s Old Town Hall. With high-quality items and knowledgeable experts, this is Britain’s oldest antiques fair. Wine will be served after 6pm during Wednesday’s open house. (for more infowww.penman-fairs.co.uk)

Thursday, 22 September - Sunday, 25 September:

London Fashion Weekend – A fabulous designer shopping event on the heels of London’s prestigious Fashion Week, open to consumers at the same exhibition and catwalk site in London’s Somerset House. Be in-the-know of the latest London fashions! (for more info - www.londonfashionweekend.co.uk)

Finally, The Honeypot Charity has a slew of events coming up this year, the September ones being:

Clapham Common Series (running) – Sunday, 18 September
Honeypot and Savills Bike RideSunday, 25 September
Run to the Beat
powered by Nike+ – Sunday, 25 September
Charity Fashion Show
- Thursday, 29 September

The Honeypot Charity is about bringing joy and fun to kids who’ve had to prematurely assume adult responsibilities. So, any way that you can support them—be it this month or the whole year round!—is truly giving the gift of childhood. (for more infowww.honeypot.org.uk)

Whatever you’re up to this month, make it a fun one! Sure, the weather is cooling down and feeling very autumnal, but don’t let that demotivate you—we’ll be putting up with it for months to come, so beat the grey-sky blues now. And if you haven’t made your relocation to London yet, contact our London Relocation agents so they can make that London move a swift one and get you closer to enjoying what the city constantly has going on. :)

Enhanced by Zemanta
Share

Relocation UK – Friday Follow

Friday, August 12th, 2011
Relocation UK – Friday Follow

Relocation UK – Friday Follow - Image by wallyg via Flickr

 

If you’re a regular twitter user you’ll have heard about the #FridayFollow. We’ve decided to round up the best of what is happening in London each weekend.

Your relocation to London is not just about the physical details of moving to London. You’ll have so much to do once you arrive in London that it is important that you take some time off over the weekends to start exploring the city.

London Proms

If you have not had a night out at the ‘Proms’ then this is one of your last opportunities for the summer. The BBC Proms run each year during the summer and present a program of entertainment. This year there were 74 concerts planned for the Proms season which ends on the 10th of September 2011.

If you have just completed your relocation to London then this is the perfect opportunity to indulge in one of the most popular summer traditions in London. The BBC Proms are held at the famous Royal Albert Hall, which is worth a visit just to marvel at the building and the design.

This festival of music and the arts has been held for the last 166 years and although it was started as a classical music showcase, it has changed over the years to include all manner of events and entertainment.

What’s on right now?

On Saturday the 13th of August, the proms will showcase the work of comedian and musician, Tim Minchin. He will be accompanied by the BBC Concert orchestra and delivers a brad of comedy and music for a fine evening out. Comedy events are a first for the Proms, and this is going to be one of the highlights of the 2011 BBC Proms. Tickets for the Proms are usually sold out weeks in advance but with a little luck you may be able get tickets through the Royal Albert Hall website.

You can also browse the rest of the season through the BBC website that is dedicated to the Proms.

Experiencing the summer Proms is a great way to experience life in the city after your relocation to London.

Enhanced by Zemanta
Share

Rule Britannia! London Relocation’s Top 5 Monarch Films

Wednesday, December 29th, 2010
Queen Victoria and Prince Albert in Court dress.

Image via Wikipedia

Author:  Colleen

I’ve said it before and can safely say again that moving to London is your key to history and culture, and the endless references to this city that you’ll find in what you read and watch without even trying is one of the most fun aspects of being a London expat. I enjoyed compiling my recent list of British Christmas movies—in part due to the unexpected challenge that posed, but also because I’m a sucker for a good film and enjoy how such a medium can creatively enhance one’s experiences and education. Today’s post is directly inspired by a DVD viewed on my last night in the States this week, and while you should certainly do your research to get a handle on accurate historical facts of England, I hope the following Top Fiver dedicated to English monarchs provides  you with enlightening entertainment as well.

[You know I hate to start one of these without a proper drumroll...*ddddddddd*...there, that's better. Cheers!]

1. The Young Victoria (2009) – Actors Emily Blunt and Rupert Friend portray the romance of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, whose partnership in marriage and royal rule guided England’s growth and prosperity during what we famously know as the Victorian Era. Victoria was Queen of England for over 63 years, rendering her the nation’s longest reigning monarch. (Related London sightseeing for this monarch: The Victoria and Albert Museum, Kensington Palace, Albert Memorial, Royal Albert Hall)

2. The Queen (2006) – Helen Mirren performs her interpretation of the presently reigning Queen Elizabeth II as she goes tête-a-tête with former Prime Minister Tony Blair over conflicting approaches to PR in the wake of Lady Diana’s death. Queen Elizabeth’s reign has spanned 57 years and counting. (Related London sightseeing for this monarch: Buckingham Palace, Windsor Castle, 10 Downing Street)

3. Elizabeth (1998) – Let’s make this a twofer and include its sequel Elizabeth: The Golden Age (2007) as well, in which actress Cate Blanchett reprises her role as the Virgin Queen, Elizabeth I. The allegedly illegitimate daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn (whose controversal marriage was not recognized by all when the legitimacy of Henry’s divorce from Catherine of Aragon was questioned), Elizabeth’s 44-year reign is considered a golden age indeed. (Related London sightseeing for this monarch: Tower of London, Westminster Abbey)

4. The Tudors (TV series, 2007-10) – Jonathan Rhys Meyers stars as King Henry VIII in this saucy BBC historical fiction series, loosely based on the relationships and politics of this sovereign (and presenting him as better eye candy than the real deal :) ). Take the history lessons learned here with a grain of salt, but the series does well in engaging a contemporary audience with this English period. Infamous for his six wives (who’ve inspired another series of historical fiction taking creative license on Henry’s escapades—namely, Philippa Gregory’s novel series that includes The Other Boleyn Girl, which was adapted to the screen in 2008 and stars Natalie Portman), Henry’s reign lasted over 37 years. (Related London sightseeing for this monarch: Hampton Court Palace, Tower of London, Windsor Castle)

5. The King’s Speech (2010) – Now playing in the States and scheduled for release in the UK next month, this already critically-acclaimed film stars Colin Firth as the stammering King George VI. The present Queen Elizabeth’s father, George VI reigned for 15 years. (Related London sightseeing for this monarch: Buckingham Palace, St. George’s Chapel, Carlton Gardens)

So there’s a sample of recent movies depicting some of the monarchy of the United Kingdom, which I’ll be keen to add to in the future with old and new. I’ve heard there are two upcoming movies in which Keira Knightly and Charlize Theron are respectively slated to portray Princess Diana, and someday it will be Princess Kate…and, if all goes well for William, Queen Kate! In the meantime, while you can visit the Tower of London for the actual crown jewels, explore the above cinematic gems within the comforts of your London apartment.

Enhanced by Zemanta
Share

August Guest Post – Monthly Activities for After You Move to London

Thursday, September 16th, 2010

This August-in-review blog post is brought to us all by Sue Hillman of It’s Your London touring company.  Providing custom tours of London tailored to your personal interests, It’s Your London will help you make the most of your time in this phenonemonal city. (For more information, see our previous blog post on It’s Your London as well visit www.itsyourlondon.co.uk)

August in London has one big landmark event in many of our diaries – the Notting Hill Carnival!  It’s 2 days of madness with the loudest of loud sound stages with over 40 of them blasting out, the wildest of wild costumes and the yummiest of yummy Caribbean food.  It’s like being on holiday with the smells and tastes of another land from goat curry, jerk chicken to saltfish and ackee with coconut juice sipped out of coconuts and, of course Red Stripe, the drink of carnival. This marvellous event has been held every year since 1966 and now over a million people crowd into the streets of Notting Hill to have a great party. The parade snakes it way through miles of crowded streets of Notting Hill with steel bands on trucks and hundreds of people following the parade. I love showing people round and had 3 different sets of friends visiting including 2 of my mother’s friends in their late 60s which was a challenge but they were game for everything except the ear splitting sound stage on All Saints Road!  I could show you hundred of photos but am limiting myself to just a few here!

Music is a big theme in August with outdoor concerts in many of London’s great parks. We went for our annual excursion to Kenwood where the picnic concerts have been going for about 30 years – well that how long I’ve been going!  Kenwood House and its park are a wonderful setting for a blanket, good food and wine and Vivaldi’s Four Seasons and the weather lived up to the music with a massive rainstorm just as we were starting out picnic!  You can see the stage by night in this photo alongside 2 shots of the Royal Albert Hall, one inside and one outside, the  home of the BBC Proms.  Each year this hall hosts 76 concerts over a couple of months and has done for the last 116 years – and no, I’ve not been going that long!  The BBC funds this amazing feast of music along with ticket sales and to ensure accessibility there are over a thousand ‘Promming’ tickets for sale each performance for just £5 if you can stand for the performance.

It is a year for anniversaries and this year saw the 70th celebration of the Battle of Britain. Each year is more precious as the heroes get older and fewer can come to the events. I was lucky enough to go to the Cabinet War Rooms where there was a Spitfire on the ground and with a Hurricane on a flypast (too fast for a photo but then speed was so important back then!) and a reading of Churchill’s moving speech in which he said ‘never in the field of human conflict has so much been owed by so many to so few’. Brings tears to the eyes just writing this and it was very emotional on 20th August this year. A group of veterans where there and one, Geoffrey Wellum, who came and talked to the crowd, shook hands, mine included, and was still life and soul of the party. You may have seen the BBC TV programme about him called First Light, the title of his book. Dame Vera Lynn was there too, an extraordinary and gracious 93 year old!

Share

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)

Share

London Bundle: The Kensington Gardens Gallivant

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Today is the first of my London Bundles that ventures out into the neighborhoods outside the City, yet still considered fairly “central London” (i.e., Zone 1).

Let’s start our journey at South Kensington Tube station (which services the District, Circle, and Piccadilly lines).  As soon as you ascend the Underground station’s steps into the light, you’ll find yourself at quite the center of action.  Surrounding the station are endless choices of restaurants and shops, so you can dip into a cafe here if you didn’t grab breakfast at your hotel or flat (you know, the perfect abode where London Relocation Ltd. just successfully placed you).  Might I recommend the darling Cafe Creperie just Northwest of the station and along the way to where your area tour will continue (make sure you bring cash, though, for those crepes…last time I was there, they didn’t accept credit or debit).

Continuing North on Exhibition Road, you will soon enough see the Victoria & Albert Museum to your right and the Natural History Museum to your left—take your pick :)   (I am, however, partial to the V&A for its artifacts, artwork, and antique furnishings and textiles on exhibit, as well as the special Grace Kelly exhibition currently on display!)  Best part of either museum is that they’re FREE.

All right then, mosey onward further North on Exhibition Road, past Imperial College, and hang a left at Kensington Road.  You will see that Kensington Gardens is just across the street.  You can enter the park if you stay on Exhibition Road, but by walking along Kensington Road, you can go past the famous Royal Albert Hall (the acoustically brilliant concert that hosts the annual Proms) and see the exotic Albert Memorial (that Queen Victoria commissioned in honor of her dearly departed husband in 1875) just across the way inside the park.  Once you reach the Southwest corner of the park, enter onto a walkway that will lead you directly to Kensington Palace, where Queen Victoria was born and pronounced Queen and where Lady Diana lived the rest of her years (if you recall the footage of the masses of bouquets mourners piled up outside palace gates, this is the place where those vigils took place).  The palace recently kicked off its Enchanted Palace exhibit to offer a bit of avant-garde eye candy while the building undergoes extensive renovation.  Venturing inside does come at a price, but just touring the grounds for free is worthwhile—the blooms decking out the Sunken Garden and swans preening on the Round Pond being visual delights.

Enjoy a pleasant stroll on the main walkway (The Broad Walk) between the pond and palace as you continue North and exit outside the Northwest corner of the park.  The main road you encounter here is just where Bayswater Road becomes Notting Hill Gate, so hang a left and continue into the well-known neighborhood.  Just past the Tube station, you can jog over onto Pembridge Road for a couple blocks until you see the entrance to Portobello Road.  Wandering the length of this road will take you past the antique, clothing, and produce stalls that give this area its character (and, yes, you’ll see sites from the movie, including the storefront of the travel bookshop in the film as well as the original shop on which it was based):

Notting Hill is an ideal neighborhood in which to close out your day, with no end to the pubs, cafes, and restaurants to grab your late lunch or dinner, or cinemas to enjoy some seated, passive time to yourself (try the Electric on Portobello for an ultra-cozy recliner as a seat or the Coronet on Notting Hill Gate for its history). From here, you can catch the Tube at the Notting Hill Gate station (District, Circle, and Central lines), or, first, pop down onto Kensington Church Street for more dinner options, including the Churchill Arms pub if you’re thirsty. Cheers!

Share
London Relocation is an all-inclusive UK relocation service specializing in helping corporate professionals relocate and finding London student apartments for international students. American owned and operated, London Relocation is adept at finding you the right apartment at the right price - and with fair UK apartment finder fees. See what our clients say about relocating to London, England from America with our UK relocation specialist, and find your London flat today.
Copyright © 2009 - London Relocation Services - All rights reserved.