Spend a fortune on a trip to London

Shoestring travel

You can spend a fortune on a trip to London but it doesn’t have to be that way.
You may be surprised to find how many top attractions in London are free too visit. With a little bit of planning, and by keeping your eyes open, it is possible to get excellent value for your hard-earned money.

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Accommodation is likely to be your biggest expense. Many London hotels are expensive, but there are ways to cut costs.
Pre-booked packages or special breaks can be excellent value, especially if arranged on-line through a reliable operator. For the best deals. book well ahead, or at the last minute. London is busy more or less all year round (mid-Jan/Feb is the “nearest it gets to low season), but many business hotels charge lower rates at weekends. It’s always worth asking for a discount on rack rates.

Check whether breakfast. VAT and service charges are included. Several budget hotel chains are well-represented in London, including Travelodge, Premier Inn and Ibis (double or family rooms sleeping up to four start from around $50/RM310).
(www.premierinn.com, www.travelodge.co.uk, www.ihishotel.com, www.lastminute.com , www.piccadillybaekpackers.com )
A bed-and-breakfast or guesthouse can save quite a bit, especially if you’re prepared to stay outside the city centre. Various agencies organise stays in private homes, which can be a pleasant and personal experience. Check the website of At Home in London for some ideas.
Apartments are good value for families or groups, and out of term, London’s halls of residence offer student rooms on a B&B or selfcatering basis.

London has a good range of hostels too, including half a dozen very popular YI-IA ones. Most offer single or double rooms as well as dormitory-style accommodation.
An even cheaper hostel option is Piccadilly Backpackers, with nofrills dorm beds from as little as E12 (RM74).

Snacking
If you’re on a strict budget, opt for self-catering. Buy ready-made sandwiches or market provisions and enjoy them in local parks or squares, as many working Londoners do during their lunch hours. Choose self-service cafes or snack-bars in less fashionable parts of town rather than conventional restaurants, though set-price lunches or pre-theatre suppers can be very good value, even in famous establishments.Well-known, reliable chains like Spaghetti House or Pizza Express can fill you up for a moderate outlay. Gastro pubs offer flexible dining and drinking throughout the day. The best serve excellent “modern British” cooking, but drinks can easily add as much to your bill as food.

Ethnic eating is amazingly varied in London. Brick Lane’s Bangladeshi curries and Jewish bagels are famous, while in Chinatown you can stoke up on dim sum for very little money. For something more homegrown, try afternoon tea, pie-and-mash or fish-and-chips. Check your bill, and don’t feel obliged to leave tips in pubs and bars, or if service is already included. (www.spaghetti-house.co.uk/, http://www.squaremeal.co.uk/)

Free attractions
London has well over 200 free museums and galleries, and many others cost less than a fiver. You can visit the permanent collections of world-class institutions such as the British Museum, the two “rates, the National Gallery, the V&A, and the Science and Natural History Museums free of charge. Not to mention dozens of smaller, specialist museums scattered all over the city.
Track down the Clockmaker’s Museum, the Bank of England Museum, the Museum of Garden History and the weird and wonderful Sir John Soane’s Museum.

It would take months to explore them all, and there’s always something new on London’s listings Latest treat is the avant-garde, admission-free Saatchi Gallery, which opens with a dynamic exhibition of contemporary Chinese art.

Then there are the commercial art galleries – all welcome visitors just to browse as well as buy.
(http://www.visitlondon.com/city_guide/budget/f free_museums.html)

If you’re an avid sightseer and want to catch lots of pay-to-enter attractions as well as free ones, consider the London Pass (50+ pay-to-enter attractions), or the GoSee Card (a 3- or 7-day pass covering 17 galleries and museums). ( www.leisurepassgroup.com )

Shopping
There’s no charge for windowshopping. You can visit the Silver Vaults and ogle designer wear at Harvey Nichols or jewellery in Hatton Garden without a penny in your pocket.
Sales nit London in January ana july, when canny shoppers turn out in force to snap up bargains. Bestvalue mainstream department stores are John Lewis (‘never knowingly undersold’) and Marks and Spencer.

Check out second-hand or discount shops like Rokit or Beyond Retro for vintage and designer clothing. London’s markets are always full of life and colour.

Berwick Street and Borough are good for specialist food products, Columbia Road for flowers, Camden Passage and Portobello Road for antiques and collectibles, Greeuwich and Covent Garden for arts and crafts.

Best hunting grounds for secondhand hooks are Charing Cross Road or Riverside Walk under Waterloo Bridge (South Bank).
(www.virtual-london.com/information/shopping-and-markets/)

Showtime
Tickets for top West End shows may cost a mint, but lots of London entertainment is completely free.

Ceremonial occasions like the Changing of the Guard, the State Opening of Parliament and the Lord Mayor’s Show attract many visitors, as well as street festivals and annual events.

Chinese New Year, the London Marathon, the Notting Hill Carnival and the Great River Race are regular fixtures on the capital’s social calendar, while jugglers, buskers and mime artists please crowds all summer in Covent Garden, Trafalgar Square or the South Bank.

To save booking fees on theatre seats, book in person at the box office rather than through a ticket agency. Avoid touts – those tempting offers may not be genuine. Some theatres, notably the National, offer a handful of stand-by or cheap same-day tickets for every performance (early birds snap up bargains as soon as the box office opens).

The Globe Theatre sells ‘groundling’ (standing) tickets for just a fiver. Leicester Square’s theatre ticket kiosk run by London theatres (known as Tkts) sells same-day topprice tickets at half-price (plus service charge).

Fringe theatre and cabaret or comedy shows at pubs and clubs generally start around the E10 (RM62) mark, compared with E25+(RM155) at most of the main theatres, while drama school pmductions (eg. at the Guildhall) may be free.
(www.officiollondontheotre.co.uk/tkts/)

You can pay E20 (RMI24) for a superior seat at one of the top West End cinemas in Leicester Square, but just a stone/s throw away in Leicester Place is the Prince Charles, and independent repertory cinema with showings from E4/RM25(even cheaper for members).
Mainstream chain cinemas such as Odeon or Cineworld sometimes offer cheap deals before midday, or on quiet weekdays.

Look out for free music in many of the city’s churches (lnnchtime concerts take place somewhere most weekdays) or bands in public parks.

There are free jazz sessions at the National Theatre and the Barbican foyer, and live opera is sometimes relayed on huge outdoor screens in Covent Garden piazza or Trafalgar Square in summer.

Lunchtime rehearsal concerts are free or very cheap at London’s music conservatoires (Royal Academy of Music and Royal College of Music), and studio audiences can attend BBC broadcasts from Maida Vale free of charge too (book well in advance for these).
Most famous of London’s musical happenings are the Proms or promenade concerts at the Royal Albert Hall and Cadogan Hall, where sameday standing-room-only tickets are sold for E6 (RM37) or so.

Walks
To enjoy London free of charge -just walk through it. It’s a huge city, but central areas are compact enough to explore on foot. Information centres provide ideas for self-guided walks. For an inexpensive sightseeing tour, take one of the many organised walks on offer; typically costing around E6 per person (some are free, visit www.walks.corn).

At any time of year, London seethes with activity and spectacle. Each of its neighbourfioods is different – even those well off the tourist trails can be full of surprises. A sharp-eyed stroll through London’s historic quarters reveals a fascinating array of architectufe and public monuments – backdrop to a heady bustle of metropolitan street-life Look out for ‘Blue Plaques’ on buildings, indicating celebrity status of former residents. Discover the Square Mile’s mazelike alleys,

where Roman walls rub shoulders with churches and glittering office blocks.
Follow the river along the Thames Path, or take a panoramic overview from any of its bridges. Soak up the scent of summer roses in Regent’s Park, or the jewel-bright rhododendrons of Richmond Park’s Isabella Plantation.

Rides
If your feet get tired, just hop on a London bus. It’s amazing how much you can see from the top of a double-decker. Lines 9, 11 and 15 take you past many of the central sights (on an old-fashioned Routemaster bus, if you’re lucky).

To see less obvious aspects of London, take the overground Docklands Light Railway through the rapidly regenerating East End (see story on page 18), or a tramride through the southern suburbs.

Cheapest way to use London’s nubile transnort system is by prepaid Oyster Card, valid on buses, tubes, trams and the DLR (a TravelCard may be better value if you want to use the suburban rail network, visit www.tfl.gov.uk).

* For more information, visit www. visitbritain.com.my