• Peckham Rye station upgrade works to start next month

    Work to upgrade Peckham Rye station is due to start next month, although it won’t be the transformational change originally planned.
    Recently restored station frontage (c) ianVisits
    A major £ 40 million upgrade of the station was put on hold last year, so £5 million of interim upgrades have been agreed instead.
    A ‘hidden’ corner of Peckham Rye station’s booking hall will be revealed for the first time in 30 years as part of the works, creating more space for c
  • The London Buzz – 3rd June 2026

    Today’s London news round-up:
    Cheapside looking east
    Today’s London news round-up:
    Calls for City Hall to do more to incentivise housebuilding in London as slowdown continues Enfield Dispatch
    Greenwich Council will finally introduce an initial 29 parking bays for Lime bikes – and is set to sign an agreement so Forest bike users will have to use them too. Greenwich Wire
    A derelict garage site in Southall is set to be transformed into four family homes under plans announced by Ea
  • New photos show HS2’s first tunnel safety door being installed

    The first safety-critical cross-passage door has been installed inside HS2’s 10-mile-long Chiltern Tunnel, as the railway progresses from a tunnelling site into a working railway.
    Cross-passage door test-installation within the Chiltern Tunnel (c) HS2
    A total of 300 cross-passage doors will eventually be installed in HS2’s tunnels, linking the northbound and southbound bores and providing emergency access routes between them. The 60kg doors are designed to withstand the pressure chan
  • Tickets Alert: Late openings at the Royal Society’s annual science exhibition

    The Royal Society is opening its London building to the public for a few days for its annual summer science exhibition, and they’re having a couple of late openings as well.The Royal Society of London for Improving Natural Knowledge, commonly referred to as the Royal Society, is the oldest continuously existing scientific academy in the world, having been founded in 1660.
    Now housed in a grand building off The Mall, they hold public talks, but also their annual science exhibition.
    This yea
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  • Jack White: These thoughts may disappear

    The former guitarist and lead vocalist of the rock duo the White Stripes has been turning his hand to making art, and is now filling a London gallery with his works.White describes his work as ‘hardware store art’, a synthesis of carpentry, upholstery, assemblage and reappropriation using materials ranging from resins, paints and epoxies to utilitarian materials and found objects.
    As an exhibition, it’s a mix of sculptures, paintings and photography.
    It opens weakly though, whi
  • Royal Observatory offering less than half-price tickets in June

    The Royal Observatory in Greenwich is slashing the cost of a visit this month, with heavily discounted entry available every Tuesday in June.
    Greenwich Royal Observatory (c) ianVisits
    Usually, tickets to the hilltop attraction cost £24 for adults and £12 for children, but on Tuesdays in June, everyone can visit for a flat rate of £10 per person.
    Perched above Greenwich Park, the Royal Observatory is one of London’s most significant scientific landmarks. It is the home of
  • Quentin Blake’s £12.5 million museum of illustrations opens its doors

    London has a new museum, and it’s also the largest of its kind in the world devoted entirely to hand-drawn illustrations.Founded by prolific artist Sir Quentin Blake, it’s actually the second home for the museum after its temporary existence as the House of Illustration in King’s Cross. However, when a former industrial building that’s been empty since the 1950s came up for grabs, they saw the opportunity to create a much larger permanent collection in London.
    Due to open
  • The London Buzz – 2nd June 2026

    Today’s London news round-up:
    (The) Strand
    A homeless man who lived around the side of Sainsburys Putney for years has died from heatstroke in the heatwave Putney News
    How Lime removed restrictions to let Deliveroo riders go at full speed through London’s parks London Centric
    The row over the fate of three park cafes on Hampstead Heath could see a decision within days. Kilburn Times
    Work is underway on more than 650 new homes as part of Barking Riverside’s expanding neighbourho
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  • Rooftop bar overlooking Parliament reopens for the summer

    A rooftop bar in the centre of London with views across to the Houses of Parliament has reopened for the summer.
    (c) Westminster Rooftop Terrace Bar
    The rooftop bar is on top of The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, the grand terracotta and brick building on the corner of Parliament Square between the Supreme Court and the Treasury. Sitting up top, it offers pretty much uninterrupted views across to Parliament and Westminster Abbey.
    Entry is £15 per person and includes a welcome gl
  • Tallest, biggest, blandest? Future City skyscraper renamed to ‘One London’

    What will eventually become the City of London’s tallest building has changed its name and, in doing so, doubtless caused perpetual headscratching about its address.
    1 Undershaft in the city cluster (c) Dbox
    What was to be called 1 Understaft, for the simple reason that is its address, is now to be known as One London – because that’s the sort of branding that marketing people think is a good idea.
    It also means that the address will be more complicated as One London, 1 Undersh
  • Lost Music Venues review: The V&A recreates the sticky-floored magic of a night out

    Anyone who spent their youth standing in sticky-floored venues, clutching a warm pint, waiting for a band that would either become famous or, more usually, not, will find the V&A’s new Lost Music Venues exhibition an evocative trip back in time.With a layout styled as a club, with ticket desk, cloakroom, a graffiti-covered greenroom and oh yes… you’ll shudder when you see the toilets, the exhibition has dialled up the atmosphere.
    All it needed was the smell of cigarettes a
  • UK would block Indian billionaire raising BT stake

    Officials cite need to maintain sovereign control over critical national infrastructure
  • Biggest UK mobile groups suffer worst year of customer losses

    Incumbents are increasingly ceding ground to virtual rivals who pay to access their network
  • BT is finally getting on top of its altnet threat

    UK telecom has put up a fight as its rivals slow their rate of sprawl
  • Application made for 882 new homes next to Sudbury Hill tube station

    A planning application has been filed for an 882 housing development on a brownfield site next to Sudbury Hill tube station in west London.
    View of the development site – source: planning documents
    The plot of land sits between the tube station and a former ten-storey office building, which has been converted into housing. The new housing development would sit on the former office car park.
    Site outline over Google maps
    The development would see seven new blocks constructed around the exis
  • Government cuts VAT on family attraction tickets for the summer holidays

    It’s going to be a bit cheaper for families to visit paid-for venues this summer, as the government has announced a temporary cut in VAT on ticket prices.The cut in VAT, from 20% to 5%, will run from 25th June through to 1st September and applies across the UK. The cut will apply to admission tickets for families to a range of attractions, including the cost of children’s meals at the venues, but only applies to venues and events where children are included in the tickets.
    So parents
  • Touch ancient poo at the Natural History Museum’s Jurassic sea monsters exhibition

    The Natural History Museum is inviting people to touch some poo in a new exhibition about the monsters of the Jurassic Oceans. It’s hundreds of millions old though, so you’re touching a stone. A pooy stone which will still make children (and some adults) go a bit ick at the thought.The exhibition proper opens with a cast of an Ichthyosaur found by Joseph Anning in 1811 – a discovery that would spur his sister, Mary to become one of the leading early fossil hunters.
    And naturall
  • Forgotten medieval pie recipe revived in the City of London

    A long-forgotten medieval dairy pie is set to be tasted again in the City of London for the first time in centuries – although thankfully it’s only the recipe that’s ancient, not the pie itself.
    London’s Floden may originate from Fladen. Photo by Christian Michelides CC BY-SA 4.0
    The dish, known as floden, will be cooked up from an ancient recipe during Milk, Memory and Cheesecake – organised by the Jewish Square Mile Foundation and Shoreditch Trust, running at The
  • BT chief warns AI boom will push up mobile phone prices

    Allison Kirkby expects the likes of Apple and Samsung to react to chip shortages by raising handset prices
  • One of the UK’s biggest steel pan gatherings is coming to the South Bank

    The Southbank Centre will pulse with the sound of Caribbean steel pan music as more than 500 musicians and over 25 steel bands take over the venue for a weekend-long celebration.
    The weekend marks 75 years since the Trinidad All Steel Percussion Orchestra (TASPO) performed live on the South Bank during the Festival of Britain in 1951 – widely regarded as the first steel band performance in the UK.
    A steelband in Trinidad and Tobago by Kip1234 CC BY-SA 4.0
    Across 25th and 26th July 2026, th
  • Southern train becomes the first to use Great British Railways colours

    The first train in Great British Railways colours has been unveiled — and passengers could soon start spotting the red, white and blue livery at stations in the south east of England.
    (c) Department for Transport (DfT)
    The rebranded Class 387 train is operated by Southern and was officially unveiled at Brighton ahead of Govia Thameslink Railway (GTR) joining the growing publicly owned rail network on 31st May.
    For the spotters – it’s number 387172, which you can track on RealTi
  • HS2’s original plan relied on a railway signalling system that didn’t exist

    On Tuesday, it was confirmed that HS2 railway will use the European Train Control System (ETCS) signalling system, which seemed like a small administrative announcement. ETCS is the future of railway signalling and is already being rolled out in the UK, so it’s unlikely the announcement surprised anyone.
    That was until this morning, when the Rail Minister, Lord Hendy, revealed that the original plan was for HS2 to effectively invent a brand-new automatic train-operating signalling system t
  • The benefits of an investment bubble

    UK telecoms sector shows how splurge of money can destroy shareholder value but deliver consumer gains
  • Go-Ahead introduces electric buses on London bus route 322

    More electric buses are arriving on London’s streets, with 13 new zero-emission buses now operating between Crystal Palace and Clapham Common.
    (c) Alexander Dennis
    Alexander Dennis has supplied 13 electric Enviro100EV buses to Go-Ahead London for Transport for London’s Route 322, which switched to the new operator on 25th April. The buses are now running every 15 minutes from Go-Ahead London’s Sydenham Garage on the route linking Crystal Palace with Clapham Common.
    The new arri
  • Dean Martin’s shoe size: The City of London’s curious American connections

    It can’t have escaped many people’s notice that it’s 250 years since our colonial cousins got a bit irate over the cost of tea and declared their independence from the mother country. To mark the semiquincentennial, a small exhibition in the City of London is showing off the, at times, rather surprising relationship between the City and the newly independent Thirteen Colonies.Some of the relationships that cross the Atlantic are not surprising, as after all, many American settl
  • Euston station rail strike warning as London Northwestern Railway cuts services for two days

    London Northwestern Railway (LNR), which runs services into Euston station, is asking passengers to plan their travel in advance ahead of two days of strike action later this week.
    (c) London Northwestern Railway
    On Friday 22nd May and Saturday 23rd May a very limited service will be in operation on the LNR network due to strike action by members of the TSSA union. Passengers are advised to only travel if necessary as trains will only run on a small number of routes.
    Services on both dates will
  • Giant mud doughnut lands at the Barbican — and yes, it’s art

    A giant muddy doughnut has arrived in the middle of the Barbican, and of course, it’s art.It’s been created by the Colombian artist Delcy Morelos, and in addition to walking around it, entrances allow you into the middle, and in one place, to walk inside the wall itself as well.
    According to the blurb, the artist creates “multisensory immersive environments that invite us to convene with the earth and reorient our relationship to land” and we’re told that visitors &
  • Tickets Alert: Visit Mortlake’s WWII air raid shelter

    On a side street not far from Mortlake station is a set of 1930s residential flats, and in front a curious brick building – the entrance to an underground air-raid shelter.
    St. Leonards Court air raid shelter (c) ianVisits
    To build the shelter, the lawn in front of the flats was excavated, and it seems likely that the excavated soil was then piled on top to create additional protection, as there’s a wall and a deep hedge running around the site today.
    While usually locked, the local
  • Stratford tipped for huge new sports and esports arena

    The UK’s largest indoor arena with capacity for 25,000 people could be built next to the former Olympic Park, if plans by a consortium get the go-ahead.
    London Colosseum concept (c) Chybik + Kristof Architects
    If built, the arena will serve as the permanent European home for a new National Basketball Association (NBA) franchise and will also be positioned as a destination for boxing, international esports, and gaming competitions.
    With the NBA planning a new Europe-based league expected to
  • New funding scheme aims to help Londoners retrain without quitting work

    London universities are among the first institutions approved to offer a new adult education funding scheme that will let people access student finance for shorter courses and retraining later in life.From this autumn, adults will be able to use student finance for the first time for flexible “bite-sized” university and college modules, rather than traditional full-length degree courses. The courses also won’t have a set deadline for completion, allowing adult students more tim

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