

QUICKMAP LONDON FULL
Albert Hall to South Kensington 15 minutes), and secondly a detailed walking map for Zones 1 (+ Richmond, Hampstead and the Isle of Dogs) which highlights the main attractions but also traffic free streets and precincts, and very wide pavements, allowing the discerning tourist to develop a traffic-lite route around the centre of London and the other three classic tourist districts.īut the value of the all-in-one map is the final map (see top picture), as it includes not only the full tube and train network for Zones 1 and 2 (and parts of Zone 3) but also a bus map too.

The all-on-one map is in fact three maps – firstly a simple walking node-network map for Zone 1 itself (see picture below) on the back cover which has estimated walking times (e.g. Can it compete with the free “around this station” maps available at most tube stations, or Google Maps on your smartphone? Perhaps! Claiming it is “London’s only tube, bus train, walk diagram” it certainly is bring something new to the table. With this in mind, the “ London all-on-one” pocket map, part of a series of UK city centre maps under the brand “ Quickmap“, might be what you need.

The tube network is never far away from you when you are in “Zone 1” and offers a navigational relief but it’s always best to explore a city by walking with it. Quirks and kinks in streets built back in Roman times, persist to the modern day. It’s very big, and most of it isn’t built on an easily understandable grid pattern. Central London has long been a spatial challenge for tourists and others unfamiliar with it.
