London

Virgin visitors to London might expect to find it teeming with red buses, black cabs and bobbies on the beat, variously dotted around the Monopoly board, where trips to Buckingham Palace and Big Ben are followed by fish and chips and a nice cup of tea. In fact, these tourist icons live on in London, remaining as rare constants in a city that embraces progress. Though, yes, Old Kent Road really is still on the lowest rung of the property ladder, and Mayfair the highest.

Most Londoners are quietly proud of their Britishness, and, provided it continues to generate tabloid headlines while holding no real power, the monarchy remains popular. While London's historical VIPs – Shakespeare, Dickens, Newton, Darwin, etc – lend the city wisdom and influence, it is the people on the ground past and present that afford London its individuality – the Dickensian waifs and strays, the East End gangsters and pearly kings and queens, those naughty punks, goths, mods and rockers, and a multi-ethnic influx of immigrants – Polish and other Eastern Europeans, Afro-Caribbeans, Africans, Asians etc. In fact, as many as one-third of Londoners are now not British-born, largely due to the government's pro-immigration policy, and out of a total of 12 million in Greater London (some 609 square miles), its non-white population is the largest of any European city (it's also the most populous). And thanks to a tidy little tax set-up for non-domiciles, London's super-rich scene is now characterized by international bankers, Russian oligarchs, and Chinese and Indian entrepreneurs. Some Londoners complain these 'non-doms' are pushing up property and art prices (admittedly dizzying) while not contributing to the public purse; others happily welcome some of the world's best brains and biggest bank accounts.

Like New York, London is less of a melting pot, more a mosaic of cultures free to retain their own identity, mostly as a result of the (albeit controversial) policy for multiculturalism (the criticism being that it has created a cultural apartheid). But while London can seem unfriendly, insular and competitive, all over are village communities, from the quaint Englishness of Primrose Hill to the curry-pushing enclave of Brick Lane. Where Christianity once dominated, London is now a pluralist society with huge communities of Hindus (the largest outside India), Jews, Muslims, Sikhs, Buddhists and a seemingly endless supply of Hare Krishna converts recruiting up and down Oxford Street.

London is a global city – ie, along with New York, Tokyo and Paris (so go the textbooks), it has a direct effect on global affairs, culturally, politically and socio-economically; it's also the world's leading financial centre. As you'd expect from a country with the world's sixth largest GDP, money is king in its capital. London consistently hits the top five in The Most Expensive City charts.

But world-class status brings world-class quality: a new breed of superchefs means London is no longer burning its food, its art and fashion are coveted world-over (London is one of the world's four fashion capitals), its music scene continues to rock the world with ever-evolving sounds from glitch to grime, while contemporary architecture maintains an iconic skyline. Building booms for the Millennium and the 2012 Olympics brings yet more attractions. Creativity sits easy within this corporate powerhouse as London thrives on the clash of opposites – the Establishment versus the underground, tradition versus experiment, the homegrown versus the imported. London's liberal, progressive outlook makes for a modern, dynamic metropolis happy to adopt a new set of icons – namely, the London Eye, 'Chelski' Football Club and chicken tikka masala (though perhaps that was more to do with our own erstwhile cooking talents). 


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