Central London

Where is the centre of London? What exactly comprises central London? Frankly, there are several versions of the truth, not least thanks to estate agents' licence ('an exceptionally well-appointed property in the heart of central London' is often none of the above). Central London essentially constitutes the City of Westminster, and is hemmed in by the river (south), the City (London's financial centre; east), Regent's Park (north) and Park Lane (west). If you were to follow a road sign that read, 'Central London, 20 miles' for precisely 20 miles, you'd eventually find yourself at Charing Cross Station: it is from here that all mileages to London are measured (it's not the geographical centre, simply fuzzy British logic).

London's dark heart is known as the West End – an imprecise zone that is neither west nor an end, but that buzzes with pleasure-seekers (note though that the pace of life is fast and tourists are often on the receiving end of pavement rage for walking too slowly). It includes the consumer frenzy of high-streety Oxford Street and Regent Street, the rather more exclusive Bond Street, Covent Garden's theatreland and seedy Soho. Covent Garden (once 'Convent's Garden' where monks grew vegetables and which until recently had a huge fruit and veg market), right, is now an entertainment and shopping destination with theatres and street performers galore, hip clothes shops, and lots of dawdling tourists unfeasibly fascinated by those silver-frosted living statues.

Soho, a historic network of narrow streets, harbours numerous wanton scenes (gay, sex, nightlife – sometimes all at once), the creative industries (advertising, TV and film) and an extended family of colourful characters that exist outside convention and inside its pubs. Also in the West End are Leicester Square (aka Cinema Central and Tourist Hell – a pedestrianized square full of naff nightclubs, rip-off restaurants, cut-price ticket booths and preying pickpockets) and Piccadilly Circus (London's Time Square, with vast neon advertising hoardings, a statue of Anteros, the Greek god of requited love, often mistaken for his – possibly more appropriate – brother Eros, god of love and lust, and lots of traffic; people even say 'Oooh, it was just like Piccadilly Circus' to mean extremely busy). Avoid both. Just north of Leicester Square is London's compact but authentic Chinatown – the main drag is Gerrard Street with ersatz oriental gates, phone box pagodas, and ornamental lions, dragons and lanterns.

Beyond the West End, the capital is back to business. The legal quarter lies just east in Holborn, and has done since medieval times when barristers worked and lodged in public houses, so-called the Four Inns of Court (Lincoln's Inn, Gray's Inn, Inner Temple and Middle Temple – the latter two were owned by the Knights Templar and are now the haunt of Da Vinci code-crackers; all now mark geographical areas).

To the north are Bloomsbury and Fitzrovia. Bloomsbury is considered London's intellectual land, home to the University of London, The British Museum and, in the early 20th century, the Bloomsbury Group, an elite circle of artists and writers, including Virginia Woolf, EM Forster and John Maynard Keynes. Blue plaques punctuate Bloomsbury's elegant Georgian terraces to commemorate other brainy residents – Dickens, WB Yeats and Edgar Allen Poe. Just west of Bloomsbury, to the west of Tottenham Court Road (the golden mile of electrical bargains), is Fitzrovia (aka Noho, as in North of Soho), which has become a zone for TV and post-production companies, and also includes a little-known Spanish quarter.


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