39km The World's Greatest City

Buckingham Palace

Buckingham Palace

 

 

Overview

The Capitals of Capitals
For the eleventh successive year London has been voted as
‘The Greatest City on Earth. The ‘best cycle ride in London’ is a 39km route. much of it on traffic-free cycle lanes. The route as described runs from Westminster to Southwark, across to the City, Shoreditch before heading up to Regent’s Park. The western leg visits Portobello, Notting Hill, Kensington along with the Royal parks. It’s a ride of landmarks and views, iconic sites as well as those which are little known.

Imagine a warm summer’s day, you’re wearing casual summer clothes. The city’s pale splendour is bathed in a soft grey-blue light. You ride through three Royal Parks, and past many palaces, not least Buckingham Palace, the King’s London residence. You ride in the shadow of towers, ranging from the Normans to Norman Foster. You ride on London’s fabulous cycle network, beside the river, through squares and cobbled yards. You pass the best Bagel shops, the best brunch stops and of course pubs. You gaze around you whilst waiting at the red lights, and notice, perhaps for the first time the gold embellishments, the carved architraves, the wall art. You might hear lunchtime concert tunes escaping out of a City Church, you might ride beside the army of workers as they cross London Bridge in absolute silence. You’ll ride with the tidal waves of cyclists, who like you are making use of the constantly improving cycleing network. There’s law, commerce, church and government. There’s entertainment, sometimes organised, sometimes impromptu. There’s endless opportunities for food and drink (London was voted again as the world’s best Food City).
The route is tailor made for life-long Londoners. It serves tourists and visitors. It works as change of route on your commute to work. If you want the city to yourself, ride early on a summer’s morning. If you want the excitement of the city, its noise and people, its smells and populated markets, ride out during the day. Evenings are good if you wish to try a pub or two. Sunday mornings work well too when the city is still half asleep.
Ride slowly. Look about you. Gaze.
Allow the city and all that it is enter your soul. For this is the greatest ride that any city can provide.

London’s best cycle route - uses London’s excellent cycle network to get around - sometimes in segregated lanes, sometimes running through quiet back streets. There are a couple of notable places where there is no provision for cyclists - Trafalgar Square, Whitehall and a short section of Fleet Street. If you are unused to London’s traffic, you may wish to walk your bike through these brief sections.


(Route Revised January 2023 and again June 2026)

Ride practicalities
The ride, which is at its best on an early summer’s morning, can of course be ridden at any time of year even in winter when the lower light levels illuminate the buildings and streets in a very special and spectacular way.

START/FINISH: Westminster Bridge. DISTANCE: 39km. TOTAL ASCENT: 301m TERRAIN AND SURFACES: Quiet back roads and extensive segregated cycle ways. Some unsegregated areas such as Trafalgar Square and Whitehall. However, early morning in any season means that the streets of this route are usually very quiet MAINLINE TRAIN SERVICES: Waterloo and Charing Cross are near to the start/finish. Westminster is served by the Underground’s District Line as well as the Uber Thames Clippers, where bikes are carried free RECOMMENDED FOOD AND DRINK STOPS: Allpress Coffee Bar Redchurch St, Beigel Bake Brick Lane, Cafe Deco, Store Street (for an informal treat of a lunch and to experience why London is voted as one of the best foodie destinations in the world) LINKS TO OTHER RIDES: London’s Cobbled streets, Greenwich to Hampton Court, Chiswick to Greenwich


Ride notes

Standing at the base of Boudicca’s statue, you see the Mother of Parliaments with its newly restored Elizabeth Tower. Time it right and the bell of Big Ben may strike the hour in its belfry. At the far end of the Palace (of Westminster as the Houses of Parliament are known) stands the Victoria Tower, which at the time of its building was the tallest stone tower in the world (1861).

The ride across Westminster Bridge in a segregated bike lane, is one of the highlights of the route. The views both up and down the river are some of the most famous river and beautiful city views in the world. Once on the South Bank, you ride past the The London Eye and the old GLC (London Government building) before passing the Royal Festival Hall, the last remaining building of the 1951 Festival of Britain.

The Palace of Westminster

The Palace of Westminster

Into the atmospheric streets of Bankside, you soon pass the incongruous Tudor theatre, the Globe - Shakespeares great ‘O’ - sitting beside the modernist Tate Modern and towering above it, The Shard. Continuing, you ride past London’s principle food market in Borough, and the Clink where the Bishop of Winchester incarcerated those he did not care for. You ride past the re-created Golden Hinde, in its time the first British vessel to circumnavigate the world, and Southwark Cathedral from where Chaucer’s pilgrims set off for Canterbury.

Over London Bridge, to the Monument which commemorates the Great Fire of 1666 and onto the great set pieces of the City - the Bank of England, the Royal Exchange, St. Paul’s Cathedral, and the Tower of London. Then it’s into the confined and edgy streets of the East End with its wall art, and eclectic shops and cafes. You may need fortifying with the best Bagel in London and drink some of the best coffee in the capital. The backstreets are the best places to see Georgian London with their cobbles, and under-stated housing. Riding through Shoreditch and parts of Tower Hamlets is more like cycling through a film set rather than on the streets of a vibrant capital city.

The route heads west now, into the grandiose area around Regent’s Park designed by John Nash for William IV. Houses facing the park cost tens of millions of pounds and the width of the streets and the quantity of trees, interspersed with many wonderful gardens is breathtaking and a wonderful antidote to the close quarters of the East. The opulence however has only just begun, for you ride into Kensington and Holland Park, one of the most desirable - and expensive - areas of any city in the world. It is a strangely quiet area where the rarified air of great wealth reigns supreme.

Shoreditch

The final leg is through the great Royal Parks of Kensington Gardens and Hyde Park where their verdancy mixes with the most wonderful and understated grey light of London. Green needs grey to highlight it’s hues and nowhere is this more evident, nor more splendid than in the expansive parks. You ride past Buckingham Palace and up the Mall to Traflagar Square, the traditional centre of London. From there, the route passes through the very heart of UK’s government, Whitehall and Downing Street to Parliament Square. Across the square with its statues of Sir Winston Churchill and other great leaders, is Westminster Abbey, the third World Heritage site along this route, where the ride ends breathless with the wonder of it all.

Every route on this website has been carefully researched as well as ridden. However situations on the ground can change quickly. If you know of changes to this route, or cafes, pubs and the like which you think other cyclists need to know about, feel free to share your thoughts below.

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