| Ben Haines |
Dec 3rd, 2002 10:40 AM |
<BR>The area in front of Kings Cross station used to have prostitutes and drug pushers, but big numbers of police, and space taken by tunnellers, are cleaning it up. Nor were these unpleasant people any trouble to the thousands of passers-by.<BR><BR>Around London, some three miles from the centre, are big areas of social housing, ugly tower blocks on grubby grassland, where corner shops are closed and the police walk in pairs. You should avoid these, but then, you have no reason to go there.<BR><BR>Now we come to questions that are more about you than about London. One Fodors forum correspondent dislikes Charing Cross underground station because a few homeless people sleep there. Why this means stay away I do not know. Two years ago on the forum I recommended shopping visits to Brixton, and drew down a cascade of disapproval, which seemed to centre upon the fact that the area is strong in black people. But in fact there are no hotels there. An Englishman who works in the City (meaning the central business district) said he thought Americans would not like the fact that streets there (and in parts of Mayfair) are empty at night. To advise people on the grounds of what assumptions they might have, rather than of actual risk, seems to me odd.<BR><BR>The Metropolitan Police warn tourists of pickpockets active in all tourist areas, and that in central Soho you take a risk if you go to a cellar bar or upstairs bar with sexy dancing, as the bill might be huge, and heavies are there to see that you paid it. Places on ground level do not seem unsafe, and in any case your accommodation will not be in a disreputable dive. The site http://www.met.police.uk/tourist/index.htm, then Advice for Visitors, runs over current police advice, but naturally says nothing about areas, good or bad.<BR><BR>Please write if I can help further. Welcome to London.<BR><BR>Ben Haines<BR><BR>
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