西伦敦的诺丁山名气斐然,甚至有一部以它命名的电影。如今,它已成为伦敦最体面的社区之一,隶属于肯辛顿-切尔西皇家自治市。 但情况并非始终如此。 这里曾是养猪场和陶器工坊的聚集地,在历经多次蜕变后,才最终如愿成为了如今备受家庭青睐的迷人社区。 伦敦诺丁山的活动既具有国际化特色又融合了多元文化,其丰富程度不亚于兰斯多恩路(Lonsdale Road)和威斯本园(Westbourne Grove)色彩斑斓的房屋。 这些色彩缤纷的联排别墅曾是多部大片的背景,再加上各式各样的市集、画廊以及世界闻名的狂欢节,定会让您流连忘返。 我们对此深信不疑!
狂欢时刻
作为欧洲最大的街头节日,诺丁山狂欢节(Notting Hill Carnival)自 1965 年以来一直让观众叹为观止。 该活动于 8 月下旬的周日及随后的周一银行假日举行,由该社区的英籍西印度裔群体主导,他们通力协作打造的花车和服饰年年都令人惊艳。 无论阴晴,现场都回荡着钢鼓和桑巴舞曲的声音,在为期两天的活动中,还有丰富的加勒比风味美食和饮品供您享用。 在每年的其他时间,您可以在牧羊人丛林帝国剧场(Shepherd’s Bush Empire)尽情领略最新的律动。 虽然这里仅能容纳 2,000 人,但曾是查理·卓别林(Charlie Chaplin)演出过的舞台,如今的演出名单则涵盖了新晋天才和家喻户晓的巨星。 珍珠果酱乐队(Pearl Jam)和滚石乐队(Rolling Stones)都曾在其事业巅峰时期登上过帝国剧场的舞台。
低价好物
波多贝罗路(Portobello Road)几乎贯穿了整个社区的南北轴线,是初识诺丁山的绝佳去处,如今它已成为其集市的代名词。 在周六的繁盛时期,集市摊位绵延近 1 公里,再加上琳琅满目的店铺橱窗,使其在视觉、文化和历史层面上都同样令人心潮澎湃。 每逢周六,古董摊位会与传统的果蔬市场、时装、复古物品及生活必需品集市汇聚一堂,而这些摊位在这一周的其他时间则会轮流出现。 白城(White City)的西田购物中心(Westfield)是诺丁山(以及更广义的伦敦)最接近传统购物商城的地方。 它位于英国广播公司电视中心(BBC Television Centre)对面,是欧洲最大的室内购物中心之一,购物体验涵盖了从 Primark 这种物美价廉的时尚品牌到 Versace 和 Gucci 等高端定制品牌。
感受脚下的绿草如茵
虽然诺丁山的许多住宅都面向小型的公共花园(有时仅供居民使用),但该社区也拥有两处向公众开放的绿地。 第一处是荷里安公园(Holland Park),这里曾是一座雅各宾式城堡的属地。 公园融合了多种景观,孔雀等鸟类在斑驳的林间嬉戏,整齐的形式花园朝向荷里安庄园(Holland House)的遗迹,而日本京都花园(Kyoto Garden)则增添了另一层意趣。 第二处是距离东面不远的肯辛顿花园(Kensington Gardens)。 作为伦敦重要的绿地之一,这里设有儿童游乐场、雕塑和鸭池,同时也是 Kensington Palace的所在地。 肯辛顿宫自 1899 年起向公众开放,至今仍是运营中的皇家宫殿,它不仅是维多利亚女王的出生地,也曾是戴安娜王妃和威廉王子的居所。
为生活而设计
不过,荷里安公园(Holland Park)值得您多停留片刻,因为设计博物馆(Design Museum)就坐落在其南侧边界。 该博物馆由设计师特伦斯·康兰爵士(Sir Terence Conran)于 1989 年创立,并于 2016 年在现址重新开放。除了馆内永久收藏的“日常”物品外,其双曲抛物面屋顶更是一个令人惊叹的设计亮点,而较低楼层则用于举办涵盖各种设计主题的临时展览。 Museum of Brands, Packaging and Advertising以另类的视角带您审视跨越时代的各种设计。 该博物馆从 1837 年开始的维多利亚时代起步,通过展示总计 12,000 件单品,探索了消费文化是如何变迁的。 如果您曾好奇一盒玉米片是如何随着时代演变的,或者吉百利紫色(Cadbury purple)是如何诞生的,您就知道该去哪里探索了!
尽情放松身心
当花团锦簇之时,位于坎普登街(Campden Street)的丘吉尔酒吧(The Churchill Arms)给人一种巴比伦空中花园般的视觉震撼;而在圣诞季,其外观则像是刚经历了一场圣诞装饰工厂的大爆炸。 这里的色彩鲜艳夺目,酒吧的酒泵也是品尝传统英国温啤酒的绝佳之选。 不妨考虑来一杯 London Pride 啤酒——它以二战伦敦大轰炸废墟上生长出的野花命名。 同样安然无恙的是电能影院(Electric Cinema),它之所以得名,是因为它是诺丁山最早使用电力照明和驱动的建筑之一。 该影院于 1910 年首次开业,也是英国最早专门建造的电影院之一,这使其成为伦敦最有氛围的观影场所之一。
探索周边顶级艺术作品
Graffik Gallery 距离波托贝洛路(Portobello Road)仅一分钟步行路程,其店名的拼写方式就足以告诉你它的艺术风格——极具个性、现代,且带有一丝前卫锋芒。 该画廊专门展示高端街头艺术,墙上陈列着当今最顶尖涂鸦艺术家的作品,其中也包括 Banksy。 如果您被喷漆艺术的世界所吸引,他们还会定期举办涂鸦工作坊和私人大师班。 位于威斯本路(Westbourne Grove)的 Maddox Gallery 已经取得了巨大成功,并将业务扩展到了全球,但一切都是从诺丁山这里开始的。 尽管成立于 2015 年,但他们同样涉足 Banksy 的作品,同时也收藏有达明安·赫斯特(Damien Hirst)和让·米歇尔·巴斯奎特(Jean-Michel Basquiat)的作品。
搭乘 Go City® 探索真实的诺丁山
您可能不会像电影《诺丁山》(Notting Hill)中那样,遇到休·格兰特(Hugh Grant)把橙汁洒在您身上。 虽然这部虚构作品描绘的社区确实有真实的一面——包括英国上流社会的口音——但区分事实与虚构的唯一方法,就是亲自前往诺丁山一探究竟。 随 Go City 一起旅行,探索伦敦诺丁山丰富多彩的活动,同时还能节省大量开支。 从设计博物馆到集市上的欢声笑语,诺丁山应有尽有。
It’s party time!
It’s party time!
Only Europe’s biggest street festival, the Notting Hill Carnival welcomes around two million revelers to its huuuuuge celebration of Caribbean and Black culture every August Bank Holiday weekend. Expect colorful floats, flamboyant costumes, Caribbean-inspired street food, and the ever-present sound of steel drums, samba and singing. Even the famously dour British weather can’t put a dampener on this kind of party!
Vacation dates don’t tally up with the carnival? No need to despair! The party continues year-round at the mighty Shepherd’s Bush Empire, a straight roll downhill from Notting Hill on the other side of Shepherd’s Bush Green. Despite its relatively modest capacity (around 2,000 lucky ticket holders), the Empire has attracted some absolutely massive names down the years, from Charlie Chaplin way back when, through Bowie, The Rolling Stones, Prince and Amy Winehouse. Just around the corner, Edwardian dancehall-turned-performance-space Bush Hall hosts even more intimate shows, including comedy, club nights and up-and-coming musicians.
Join a walking tour
Join a walking tour
But perhaps you’re looking for a more sedate intro to the various charms of Notting Hill. We’ve got you covered, with a couple of quite excellent guided tours. Pro-tip: both are available with the Go City London pass, which can save you a fat stack on entry to more than 100 top-tier London tours, activities and attractions.
First up, Brit Movie Tours runs – as you may have guessed from the name – a movie-themed stomp around the neighborhood, taking in filming locations from Love Actually, Paddington 2, The Italian Job and – yep, you guessed it – Notting Hill. And, as well as that famous ‘blue door’ (behind which, for all we know, Hugh Grant may well still be bumbling), you’ll also get a sneaky peek at the homes of the local celebs who live here.
Alternatively, join this stroll which takes in several of the same spots on and around Portobello Road, as well as a wander through the bucolic environs of Kensington Gardens, including a tour of the palace grounds and a chance to chill in Princess Diana’s beloved Sunken Garden. You’ll also take in Queen Victoria’s towering gilded monument to her dear departed prince, and ogle the iconic dome of the Royal Albert Hall. The tour wraps with a takeaway cream tea – just about enough to fortify you for the short trek back up to Notting Hill.
Pssst! Your Go City London pass also gets you entry to several of the attractions you’ll spot on these tours, including the Royal Albert Hall and the opulent interiors of Kensington Palace.
Bag yourself a bargain
Bag yourself a bargain
The candy-coloured houses on and around Portobello Road are like catnip to Insta influencers. But it’s along Portobello Road proper where the real magic happens. Follow the crowds past those swoonsome townhouses to buzzy market stalls that hawk everything from cheap plastic trinkets to eye-wateringly expensive antique silverware. Looking for a London bus keychain? An elusive original Kinks vinyl record? A Fonz-style leather jacket? An antiquarian map of East Anglia? You’ll find it all down here in London’s most popular – and picturesque – bric-a-brac market. Saturdays sees the antiques stalls joined by a traditional fruit and vegetable market. Afterwards, amble northwards to Little Venice for (seasonal) boat rides along the Regent’s Canal. You may even hear the telltale roars, hoots and screeches of London Zoo as you bob gently along.
Prefer your shopping experiences a little more spenny? The closest Notting Hill has to a shopping mall is Westfield, back down the hill in Shepherd’s Bush. It’s one of Europe’s largest covered shopping centers, spanning the buying experience from the cheap and cheerful fashion of Primark to the high-end couture of Versace and Gucci. Bars and restaurants galore, and an entertainment complex that includes a cinema, bowling alley, VR games and more, complete the line-up.
See out how the other half live
See out how the other half live
So you’ve ticked off Hugh Grant’s (fictional) front door and been inside Princess Diana’s former home, but if you want a real insight into the lifestyles of the rich and famous, take a stroll along Kensington Palace Gardens. Not to be confused with Kensington Gardens (the royal park next door) or indeed the gardens of Kensington Palace, KPG runs north to south between Notting Hill Gate and Kensington High Street and is known locally as ‘Billionaire’s Row’. And not without good reason.
For the palatial mansions and ambassadorial residences that line this most prestigious of thoroughfares are home to diplomats, entrepreneurs, oligarchs and even sultans. We’re talking Lakshmi Mittal (aka ‘the Carnegie of Calcutta’), Tamara Ecclestone (daughter of Formula One mogul Bernie), and the actual Sultan of Brunei, to name just a few. Ogle their opulent facades and super-high fences as you pap your way along, keeping an eye on the dozens of wall-mounted security cameras as they carefully track your every plebeian move.
Feel the grass beneath your feet
Feel the grass beneath your feet
Although many of Notting Hill’s homes face out onto small communal gardens – sometimes reserved for residents alone – the neighborhood also includes two substantial public green spaces. The first is Holland Park. Once the grounds of a Jacobean castle, its magical mixture of landscapes includes dappled woodland, formal gardens that look towards the remnants of Holland House, and a Japanese garden complete with koi carp. Don’t forget to say hey to the resident ostentation of strutting peacocks, their showboating matched only by the fire of the maples in autumn and the blush of spring’s pretty-in-pink cherry blossoms.
We’ve already encountered Kensington Gardens, but it’s worth lingering a little longer. This fairly substantial park lies largely to the west of the Serpentine, directly adjacent to its larger sibling of Hyde Park. Snap a selfie on the Serpentine Bridge, and drop by the Serpentine Galleries for eye-popping contemporary art. Seek out the century-old bronze statue of Peter Pan. Commissioned by JM Barrie himself, it stands just outside the Diana Memorial Playground, one of the finest kids’ outdoor play areas in town. Elsewhere, pause by the fairytale Round Pond with its dabbling ducks and swans-a-swimming, and look out for the impossibly photogenic Queen Caroline’s Temple, a neoclassical gem.
A design for life
A design for life
If you’ve got a bit of an eye for sleek and stylish design, you’re bound to get a kick from the Design Museum. Founded by Sir Terence Conran in 1989, it has been in its current location at the southern end of Holland Park since 2016. The hyperbolic paraboloid roof acts is a design statement in itself and hints at what’s inside: a permanent collection of ‘everyday’ items and lower floors that host temporary exhibitions on a broad range of design themes.
Taking an alternative view of design through the ages, the Museum of Brands boasts more than half a million items, running the gamut from children’s toys to vintage postcards, wartime ephemera and royal souvenirs. This vast social history tracks the evolution of consumerism and examines how technology has enabled change and progress – check out the retro ads screening in the TV Room. If you’ve ever wondered how Corn Flakes packaging has evolved over the ages, or how Cadbury’s signature purple palette came into being, this is the place to head!
Discover the best art around
Discover the best art around
A short hop from Portobello Road, Graffik Gallery is individual, contemporary and just a little bit edgy. Specializing in high-end street art, its walls display some of the best graffiti artists of the moment – including Banksy. Should the world of the spray-can grab you, they regularly host graffiti workshops and masterclasses.
Nearby, Westbourne Grove’s Maddox Gallery has been successful enough that it’s expanded internationally, though it all started right here in Notting Hill. They too have their finger in the Banksy pie, alongside works by Damien Hirst and Jean-Michel Basquiat – not a bad pedigree, considering the gallery was only founded in 2015.
And if all that sounds a little highbrow for your tastes, well, you could always take yourself off ice-skating at the legendary QUEENS rink just north of Kensington Gardens instead. That’s Notting Hill for ya: there’s something for everyone.
In the market for more London-based tips? Find things to do in and around Covent Garden, and familiarize yourself with all of the different Go City London pass options.
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