Showing posts with label river thames. Show all posts
Showing posts with label river thames. Show all posts

London | Days N° 15-17 | Emirates Air Line, Canary Wharf, and St Paul's

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

St Paul's Cathedral from One New Change
I'm sorry for the lag in my posts! I'm a couple days behind, but my final exam is coming up quickly, so I've been spending much of my free time studying (again). This past Sunday, my friend and I visited North Greenwich and Canary Wharf, and early this morning, I managed a quick trip to St Paul's. I'm trying to squeeze in as much as I can before I leave in a few short days! I can't believe that this trip has gone by so quickly already...

So on Sunday, after having breakfast, my friend and I took the tube down to Greenwich. Another LSE student had recommended trying out the Emirates Air Line over the River Thames, which is a line of gondolas (kind of like one of the enclosed glass ski lifts) that starts in North Greenwich next to the O2 Arena and passes over the River Thames. I've seen the Thames from all kinds of angles now: the central part of the river (Houses of Parliament and such) from the London Eye, the eastern half that passes through London from the riverboat cruise, and now the Greenwich area from the Emirates Air Line. This latest trip afforded great views of Canary Wharf, the O2 Arena, and the very windy bit of the Thames that lies to the east of central London. 

View of the O2 Arena and Canary Wharf from the Emirates Air Line
Both sides of the river around the Emirates Air Line felt a little more like Dubai than London! They were very clean, new, and modernly sculpted areas, with luxury shops and uber-modern architecture. A large proportion of the people who were there sightseeing were Arab, and the food being sold was predominantly Middle Eastern; like I said, it kind of felt like I was in the UAE. It was very interesting and different than I would have expected in London.  

After our ride, my friend and I stopped at Canary Wharf, which was one of our stops one the way back to Holborn. Because it was a weekend (and August, when many Europeans are on holiday), it was pretty desolate. It was very different than I expected. Since it's on the other side of the river and a little further out of town, I didn't think Canary Wharf would be brand-new, sparkling clean, and made up of glittering skyscrapers, quays, gardens, and plazas full of luxury shops, cafes, and restaurants. It was really impressive. The tallest buildings belonged to the big banks, Citi and JP Morgan and such. The lower levels of these skyscrapers had shops and restaurants, and were oriented along the edges of the quays and around central gardens and plazas. Like I said, it was quite empty (except for some other tourists and diners), so we were able to walk around and see the buildings easily. I was very impressed - and it was strange to think there's a chance that perhaps, one day, if I'm extraordinarily lucky, I may have the opportunity work there....

Canary Wharf
Anyway, Monday was spent in class and studying, of course, though I had a very late afternoon tea at Patisserie Valerie in Knightsbridge. On Tuesday, I woke up early and took the tube to St Paul's Cathedral before my 11:00 class. I wish I had more time to spent at the cathedral (especially after spending £13 on admission!), but it was absolutely stunning. The walls and columns were white marble, along with the many, many statues that were set into the aisles and transepts. Some of the monuments along the aisles were black stone, and the ceiling and arches were beautiful, many-coloured mosaics. I thought the white of the walls and pillars only made the ceilings more beautiful. There were hundreds of chairs set around the church, and even early in the morning, there were already many people there visiting, on tours, praying...   
I've visited my fair share of churches and cathedrals in my life, most of them Catholic, and this one was different than I expected in that almost none of the statues set along the aisles, transepts, and in grottos were religious. They were all memorials to military heroes who had died during their service. They were beautiful and interesting (many of them were life-sized depictions of a particular man as he was dying in battle, on his horse or at sea, but being caught by angels as he fell). Still, it was strange to see very few religious statues in a church, especially when I'm used to seeing innumerable murals and stained glass windows and statues and mosaics of saints, angels, and the Holy Family in Catholic churches. It was quite tranquil and humbling in a different way.    

London | Days N° 12-13 | Riverboat Cruise

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Thursday and Friday of this week mainly consisted of classes, and the realisation that I only have a week left in London. I love this place so much. Not even the people, or the culture, but the place itself. The cafes and shops and gardens and river. I'm so, so sad that I'll be here for only one more week.

After the midterm on Wednesday, my Financial Markets class switched professors: our dear and very fabulous Dr Pascal Frantz left for Dr Christian Julliard as planned, who is teaching the second half of the course. This next week (and the final exam) will be more theoretical and less quantitative than the first half of the course and the midterm, and I'm so grateful. I haven't gotten my midterm grade back yet, but it was purely memorising formulas and solving equations, which I really don't enjoy. I'd prefer to explain these theories in words (rather than formulas) any day. Dr Julliard is young and energetic, and should be easy to learn from.

After class on Thursday, I went to Waterstones Piccadilly to read. I didn't have much homework to do, so I made progress in A Dance with Dragons, the fifth book in the A Song of Ice and Fire series. I need to finish the series before I start my fall semester, or I'll have to wait until I graduate to finish it! And then immediately after class on Friday, my friend Fidan and I returned to our residence to get ready for the long-awaited Riverboat Disco. This very popular event is hosted by LSE each summer session and is open exclusively to students, and even so, only a portion of the students are able to get tickets (the boat accommodates 600, and there are thousands of LSE summer students). After the tickets had all been sold, some of the unlucky students were purchasing them from other students for ten times their face value. My friends and I (after a lot of stress) managed to get tickets on the first day they were sold.

The riverboat (shown above!) set off from Tower Pier, which is right next to the Tower of London and Tower Bridge, and across the river from the Shard.  The boat was quite lovely, with a grand staircase and two bars, dining rooms, and a dance floor. My friend and I spent most of the evening on the prow, watching the Thames pass by. Tower Bridge was opened for our boat to pass under, and the cruise went down the river to the east, past Greenwich, all the way to the O2 arena. Unfortunately, it didn't head west, to pass the London Eye and Houses of Parliament, which would have been really amazing to see at night: but it was too large to go under London Bridge and the others bridges in central London.

Many of the other students went off to various clubs in London after the cruise ended at midnight, but my friend and I returned to High Holborn to have a midnight snack and sleep. We plan on doing some more sightseeing on our last weekend here in London!
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