Friday, 21 October 2016

Hello London I


Camden Markets


The collegiate legal institution of Gray's Inn was established some 700 years ago although many of the buildings on the site now date from post-war rebuilding following 1941 bomb damage. In the mid-C16th Gray's Inn consisted of a single court with walled garden to the north, known as Green Court. Surrounded by barristers' chambers and offices, the gardens, also known as Gray's Inn Walks, were first laid out in 1606 under the direction of Francis Bacon, but were altered from the C18th onward. The main feature is a broad gravelled path between an avenue of mature plane trees, with ornamental trees and shrubs behind; at the end are Indian bean trees grown from slips brought back by Sir Walter Raleigh and planted by Bacon.

The imminent royal nuptials commemorated in jellybeans

Front window of a pizzeria on Portabello Road


Vesuvio or artificially coloured chrysanthemums
Westminster bridge from upstairs on the No 148 bus

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