What's your favourite British landmark?

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CockneyRebel
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13 Jan 2006, 11:41 pm

St Paul's Cathedral, The Tower of London and the Tower Bridge and the Routemaster. (I just had to put in the last one.)



nirrti_rachelle
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13 Jan 2006, 11:58 pm

Harrod's (I love shopping) :lol:
The Millenium Wheel
Buckingham Palace
The Underground (I love subways)


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Emettman
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14 Jan 2006, 3:19 am

It doesn't look like the Diana memorial fountain has quite made the grade...

Though a stroll through Kensington gardens, Hyde park, Green park and St. James' park is an impressive walk on a nice day.
(a golden-leafed autumn, perhaps, but that that was another thread)


Pontcysyllte Aqueduct: impressive from below, and impressive a different way taking a boat across it!
http://www.chirk.com/aqueduct.html



mjs82
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14 Jan 2006, 9:25 am

Fogman wrote:
I've Never been there but, I like the former Battersea Power Station.

-- For those of you who don't know what this is, it was on the covers of Pink Floyd's "Animals", Hawkwind's "Quark Strangenes and Charm" releases, as well as the movie 1984, where it stood in as the headquarters for the Ministry of Love.

Pics can be seen here:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/uk/ ... er_station


Ooh, excellent taste :wink:
To join the rank outsider list, I'm going to have to second that one.



queerpuppy
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14 Jan 2006, 9:33 am

I love the outside of Battersea power station, but the interior of derelict buildings freak me out. I used to have nightmares about them, when I was a very small child. That, and nightmares about the Barbican.



Emettman
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14 Jan 2006, 9:53 am

queerpuppy wrote:
...and nightmares about the Barbican.


That's reasonable. I haunted that area in 1974-78, while at Northampton Hall of City University. The Barbican walkways were an odd location, doubly so at odd hours of the night. Hardly ever anyone around...
(Coming back from a 2am expedition to Dunkin Donuts at Ludgate Circus, perhaps, celebrating finishing a piece of coursework at the last hour.)



psych
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14 Jan 2006, 10:47 am

Emettman wrote:
It doesn't look like the Diana memorial fountain has quite made the grade...


I consider myself to be a mature and generally responsible individual...

but the temptation to piss in that perpetual-stream when 200 tourists are paddling there....ooohh - it takes more restraint than can reasonably be expected!



psych
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14 Jan 2006, 10:50 am

Emettman wrote:
..
Pontcysyllte Aqueduct: impressive from below, and impressive a different way taking a boat across it!
http://www.chirk.com/aqueduct.html


I wanted to post that, but didnt know the name. I was seriously planning to move onto the waterways at one point, and that wouldve been my first pilgrimage - have you been across it?



Emettman
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14 Jan 2006, 2:56 pm

psych wrote:
have you been across it?


Yes, I've taken a boat across it, in '84 or '85. I was on the roof at that point, for photographical perspective, one way and on the helm the other. Most of the crew were cowering inside, both ways.

Living on a canal boat was something that occured to me, but I encountered too many checks when I considered the practicalities.



psych
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14 Jan 2006, 5:16 pm

on the roof?! ! 8O that mustve taken some balls! - one moment of dizziness....



Laz
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14 Jan 2006, 5:36 pm

I like the white cliffs of dover answer. Hopefully its when you are moving away from them on a ferry out of the country. Joy :lol:



Emettman
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15 Jan 2006, 4:42 am

With nice timing, it seems that the Department of Culture, Media and Sport are running a project seeking "British Icons" and have got a preliminary list of twelve.

I caught this on Radio 4 (another icon) and found the transcript on-line:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/4610366.stm

And yes, CockneyRebel, the Routemaster is there!

Here we go: browse, vote or nominate.

http://www.icons.org.uk/



TheBladeRoden
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15 Jan 2006, 5:51 am

queerpuppy wrote:
Quote:
London Bridge.


Do you mean London Bridge, which is a "fairly dull edifice comprising three spans of pre-stressed concrete cantilevers" ( from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Bridge )and is really bland, or do you mean Tower Bridge, which is a Victorian gothic-revival masterpiece?

I ask for clarification because the two are often confused by people not from Britain - to the tune that the London Bridge opened in 1831 was bought by some American entrepreneur and rebuilt in Arizona. He thought he was buying Tower Bridge, but called it London Bridge.


All I know is that the London Bridge is currently falling down. At least, that's what I told some lady.


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kevv729
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15 Jan 2006, 6:50 am

queerpuppy wrote:
Quote:
London Bridge.


Do you mean London Bridge, which is a "fairly dull edifice comprising three spans of pre-stressed concrete cantilevers" ( from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Bridge )and is really bland, or do you mean Tower Bridge, which is a Victorian gothic-revival masterpiece?

I ask for clarification because the two are often confused by people not from Britain - to the tune that the London Bridge opened in 1831 was bought by some American entrepreneur and rebuilt in Arizona. He thought he was buying Tower Bridge, but called it London Bridge.
I guess I meant the Tower Bridge.


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KingdomOfRats
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15 Jan 2006, 1:46 pm

Anyone know what that hill/cliff(?) with the white chalk horse carved into it is called?
Only landmarks I have ever seen up close are mostly all within my own city as I don't travel out of here,but I think that horse carving is amazing,and i've only seen it on tv or photos.


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Emettman
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15 Jan 2006, 2:10 pm

KingdomOfRats wrote:
Anyone know what that hill/cliff(?) with the white chalk horse carved into it is called?


The ancient white horse is at Uffington.

http://www.hows.org.uk/personal/hillfigs/uff/uffing.htm

There are other chalk figures,
(Long man of Wilmington, Cerne Abbas Giant)

But the horse is the most graceful (and the giant the rudest)