honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, September 30, 2007

More tips for London on the cheap

By Chris Oliver

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

A sculpture of a swimmer on the South Bank of the River Thames was just unveiled on Sept. 18. Tower Bridge is in the background.

MAX NASH | Associated Press

spacer spacer

BEST LONDON WEB SITES

www.visitlondon.com

http://kids.visitlondon.com

www.timeout.com/london

www.walks.com

www.londonfreelist.com

www.2for1entry.co.uk

www.london-footprints.co.uk

spacer spacer

Travel during the off-season: From November to mid-March, you can find cheaper flights and hotels. Use prepaid phone cards to call home. Obtain euros from local ATM machines at reasonable exchange rates.

Theater tickets: The Half Price Theatre Ticket Booth in Leicester Square sells discount tickets for same-day West End theater shows. Service charge is $5 per ticket. Cash and credit cards only, www.officiallondontheatre.co.uk.

Like water and chocolate: Stave off hunger. Buy bottled water and a pack of chocolate bars at a supermarket for far less than what you pay at tourist sites.

GETTING AROUND: Buy an Oyster card, a pay-as-you-go plastic card the size of a credit card that you can top up as needed, saving money on regular bus and tube fares. Available at tube stations and news agents. Multi-day Travel Cards also save money and time spent in lines for tickets. Red double-decker buses offer the best value: The No. 11 bus will take you by the Bank of England, Mansion House, St. Paul's Cathedral, Trafalgar Square, Downing Street, Westminster Abbey and King's Road. The No. 73 takes you along Oxford Street to Marble Arch and on to Kensington, past Hyde Park and Harrods.

London Transport: Web site has great maps for tourists, including a bus map showing routes and major tourist attractions: www.tfl.gov.uk/gettingaround/1106.aspx.

Walk: The center of London is a great place to walk, and you'll see more by going on two feet. Check www.walks.com for distances of guided and self-guided tours. Download podcasts of London walks at www.londonwalks.libsyn.com.

WHERE TO STAY:

  • In the Bloomsbury area between Kings Cross and Oxford Street, B&Bs are plentiful; rates start around $60 per person. www.bedandbreakfasts-uk.co.uk/britainexpress/londonframe.htm.

  • In the Earls Court area, a favorite haunt for Americans, Australians and students, check out My Place Hotel. Rates are $200 per room per night, double; www.myplacehotel.co.uk.

  • Travelodge Covent Garden in the West End charges $200 per room per night double; Travelodge Battersea, a tube ride away in South London, currently has a room for $52 per room double. www.travelodge.com.

  • Imperial College in Kensington has en-suite rooms in its halls of residence for $74 next to the Royal Albert Hall and just a short stroll from Kensington Gardens. Full English breakfast is included. Basic rooms with shared facilities cost only $54 a night and still include breakfast. Snacks and light meals are also available on the college's campus. www.wotif.com/hotel1588.

  • The Youth Hostel Association has several options in London for family travel. www.yha.org.uk/find-accommodation/london/index.aspx. At St Paul's on Carter Row, the former Choir Boys School is within a moment of St. Paul's Cathedral; rates start at $37 per person ($30 if younger than 18) through February. www.yha.org.uk/find-accommodation/london/hostels/london-stpauls/index.aspx.

  • Consider a house swap. U.K. residents will leap at the chance to swap their houses for one in Hawai'i. www.homelink.org.uk.

    WHERE TO EAT

    According to the new Zagat guide, the average meal in the capital now costs a daunting $80, up 2.9 percent from last year, for three courses with one glass of wine). Outrageous!

    BEST RESOURCE: Time Out London's Cheap Eats section. www.timeout.com/london/restaurants/features/2553.html. You'll find every category of cuisine, from Caribbean cuisine to Malaysian, Mediterranean to pie and mash. There's a wide of laces to eat out and spend less.

    BEST BET: London pubs serve hot food and sandwiches at lunch and in the evening; the menu is on a blackboard. A pint of beer in central London is about $5.50. Find good pubs at www.londontown.com.

    RECOMMENDED: Cafe in the Crypt at St. Martin in the Fields, Trafalgar Square; large portions, good value.

  • Wagamama Noodle Bar, named by Zagat as London's most popular restaurant, has many locations across the city, with a good kids' menu. www.wagamama.com.

  • Most London museums and art galleries have restaurants offering self-service meals at reasonable prices.

  • Harrods Food Hall for exotic samples and jaw-dropping fabulousness; Harrods and Fortnum & Mason food halls often have free samples. Visit at the end of the day when both sell off fresh food cheaply.

  • Marks & Spencers food section sells substantial sandwiches to eat in the nearest park, $6. Fruit stalls are everywhere in London for cheap delicious in-season edibles.

    BRING HOME: Sainsburys, Tescos and Marks & Spencers have delicious English biscuits (cookies) and chocolates for under $10, beautifully gift-wrapped.

    Reach Chris Oliver at coliver@honoluluadvertiser.com.