publication date: Aug 21, 2009
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author/source: Michael Robinson
Come out of
London Bridge station and follow the signs for
Tooley Street and you can't miss the
London Bridge Experience. A guide, dressed in a somewhat
Dickensian style, with a
gruesome scar across his cheek directs you across Tooley Street where you are met by a
Beefeater who points you to the
queue for the entrance.
Although only about
50 metres long, we had to wait some
50 minutes to get into the show. A tall,
cadaverous man wearing a
frockcoat and top hat was wandering up and down the queue, making
cheesy jokes but not telling us anything about
how long the wait would be. When
Mathew (12) and I got to the
front of the queue, the cadaverous gentleman asked us where we came from (he insisted that Mathew was
Ronald Weasley and that I was his
big brother) and when we told him he said that he had good news and bad news for us. The bad news was that we were from
East Dulwich and the
good news was that we would be next into the show.
Once through the
ticket barrier, we had another
ten minute wait while our party was made up to
25. The experience was set up in
brick vaults under one of the
bridge piers, and there were posters, faded and peeling
advertising things from a celebration of
Queen Victoria's jubilee, to a day out at the races and
Huntley & Palmer's biscuits.
The
first part of the experience
comprised a series of rooms, each one representing a
period of history. A member of our party was "
volunteered" to be "
Brownlow", immune to ghouls,
ghosts and zombies who would
ensure our safety throughout the tour.
The first room was
hosted by Boudicca who told us how the
Iceni destroyed the
Roman bridge and gave us sterling
advice on the best way to kill
Roman soldiers. Then we moved on to a room where a
Norwegian was more interested in
beer and
hairy women than in killing
Danish Vikings. Next was the woman whose job it was to prepare
traitors' heads for display on poles at the
south gate to London Bridge. There was a number of heads
impaled on poles, which in the
circumstances looked remarkably cheerful!
From there we went into a room infested by a
mad woman, clearly rendered insane by the
Great Fire of London. Then we were
transported to the mid-
19th century, in a room which
actually smelled of horse dung and rotting fish. The guide there was a
beadle who told us about "
the great stink" of 1858 caused by
pollution in the Thames aided and abetted by
Thomas Crapper's eponymous invention for the better-off. Last was an
eerie display about the American millionaire businessman who bought the penultimate
London Bridge and had it re-built in
Arizona for some $4m.
At this point the
tour of the tombs was about to begin, the
really scary bit, but as Mathew is
asthmatic, we were advised
not to go on that part, so I can't offer any
comments on it. Be
warned though, children
under 11 are not allowed to go into the tombs and those
under 15 must be accompanied by an
adult.
All-in-all it was an
interesting visit.
The
London Bridge Experience & Tombs is open
seven days a week
10am to 6pm except 24 December to 1 January
11am to 4pm; closed Christmas Day and Boxing Day
Ticket pricesAt the gate adults £21.95, children £16.95; family ticket £64.95
Online prices: adults 16.95, children £12.95, family ticket £49.95
Also look out for
voucher deals!
www.londonbridgeexperience.com