West London stretches from the grand terraces of Notting Hill and the royal parks of Kensington through the canal paths of Little Venice and the riverside villages of Chiswick and Kew to the ancient deer park of Richmond. This comprehensive guide covers every significant neighbourhood, with everything you need to know about visiting, eating, drinking, and exploring.
Eating and Drinking in Notting Hill
Westbourne Grove and its surrounding streets have one of the most concentrated collections of good restaurants in London. Ottolenghi on Ledbury Road (and the smaller deli on Motcomb Street in Belgravia) remains the benchmark for its cooking style β the influence of Yotam Ottolenghi's vegetable-forward, Middle Eastern-inflected approach on London restaurant culture is incalculable, and the original Notting Hill shop remains excellent. The Ledbury on Ledbury Road is a two-Michelin-star fine dining restaurant and one of the best in London; booking essential and expensive. Electric Diner on Portobello Road serves reliable American diner food in a building that was formerly a cinema; Granger and Co on Westbourne Grove was one of the first London outposts of the Australian all-day breakfast culture that is now ubiquitous. The Sun in Splendour pub on Portobello Road is the best of the area's traditional pubs.
Getting There
Notting Hill Gate tube (Central and District/Circle lines) is the main access point. Ladbroke Grove (Hammersmith and City line) is useful for the northern end of Portobello Road.
Kensington and South Kensington
The area of London between Hyde Park and the Thames, running west from Knightsbridge and Sloane Street, encompasses some of the grandest residential streets in the city and an extraordinary concentration of world-class cultural institutions. This is the London of royal palaces, of Edwardian garden suburbs, and of the Victorian museum-building project that gave the world the V&A, the Natural History Museum, and the Science Museum in a single remarkable concentration.
The Museums
The three museums of Exhibition Road represent one of the most remarkable concentrations of cultural infrastructure in the world, all free to enter. The Victoria and Albert Museum is the world's largest decorative arts and design museum β 145 galleries covering ceramics, textiles, fashion, jewellery, metalwork, photography, and sculpture from every culture and period. The permanent collection alone requires multiple visits to begin to understand; the temporary exhibition programme is consistently excellent. The Natural History Museum, housed in Alfred Waterhouse's extraordinary Romanesque building of 1881, contains 80 million specimens across its earth sciences, life sciences, and human history collections. The great blue whale skeleton in Hintze Hall is one of the most spectacular single objects in any museum in the world. The Science Museum spans five floors of scientific and technological history, from early flight and steam power to computing and space exploration.
Kensington Palace and Gardens
Kensington Palace has been a royal residence since 1689 and is currently home to the Prince and Princess of Wales. The state rooms are open to visitors year-round and provide an exceptional insight into the decorative arts of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries; the temporary exhibitions β which typically focus on royal fashion, personal collections, or specific historical periods β are generally very well done. The gardens around the palace, which form the western extension of Hyde Park, are among the finest formal gardens in London: the Italian garden, the round pond, and the Diana Memorial are the main features.
High Street Kensington
High Street Kensington is one of London's major retail streets β a mix of high-street chains and independent shops, with good-quality restaurants and cafes along the parallel streets. The Design Museum on Kensington High Street (in the former Commonwealth Institute building) is one of the best venues for design, architecture, and fashion exhibitions in Britain and is worth checking for its current programme.
Chelsea and Fulham
Chelsea's reputation rests on two centuries of association with artists, writers, and the fashionable avant-garde β Turner, Rossetti, Whistler, Oscar Wilde, and later the 1960s King's Road boutique culture that made Chelsea synonymous with a particular strain of British cool. The cool is less concentrated now (priced out, in large part) but the neighbourhood retains significant character in its streets, its river frontage, and its gardens.
The Chelsea Physic Garden
The Chelsea Physic Garden on Royal Hospital Road is one of the oldest botanic gardens in Britain β founded in 1673 by the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries as a medicinal herb garden β and one of the most beautiful urban gardens in London. Covering about four acres on the north bank of the Thames, it contains over five thousand plant species arranged by geographical origin, medicinal use, and botanical family. Open from February to October; there is an admission charge (discounted for National Art Pass holders). The garden cafe is excellent.
King's Road
King's Road runs west from Sloane Square through Chelsea and into Fulham. In its central Chelsea section it retains some of the independent retail character that made it famous; in the Fulham stretch it becomes a more standard London high street of mixed quality. The Saatchi Gallery on Duke of York's Square (just off King's Road near Sloane Square) is a major contemporary art venue in a beautifully converted military building; admission is generally free.
The River in Chelsea
The Thames embankment between Chelsea Bridge and Battersea Bridge offers some of the most atmospheric riverside walking in London β quieter and less visited than the South Bank, with views across to Battersea Power Station and the new Nine Elms development on the south bank. The Albert Bridge, lit at night by thousands of light bulbs, is one of the most beautiful river crossings in London.
Hammersmith and Shepherd's Bush
Hammersmith is one of the most underrated areas of west London β a neighbourhood that functions primarily as a transport hub and business district (with a large concentration of media companies) but that has a genuinely good restaurant scene, excellent riverside pub gardens along the Thames, and the Hammersmith Apollo β one of the best medium-sized live music venues in Britain.
The Riverside
The stretch of the Thames in Hammersmith, between Hammersmith Bridge and Chiswick Bridge, has a remarkable concentration of good pubs with river terraces: the Dove (a seventeenth-century inn with one of the smallest bar rooms in Britain and a celebrated river terrace), the Black Lion, the Rutland, and the Blue Anchor are among the best. On summer evenings the riverside here is perfect β boats going past, the light changing over the water, the sense of being in a village entirely separate from the city that begins a few streets inland.
Shepherd's Bush
Shepherd's Bush is immediately north of Hammersmith and is known primarily for Westfield London β the enormous shopping centre that opened in 2008 β and the Bush Theatre, one of the best small producing theatres in London. The theatre runs a programme of new writing with a particular emphasis on voices that are underrepresented in mainstream British theatre; the quality is consistently high and the tickets are significantly cheaper than comparable West End productions.
Chiswick
Chiswick occupies a bend in the Thames about six miles west of central London and feels, on a weekday morning, more like a prosperous market town than a district of the capital. The high street is good β a mix of independent food shops, cafes, bookshops, and restaurants that suggests a community with higher-than-average disposable income and lower-than-average appetite for chain retail. The riverside section around Chiswick Mall and Strand-on-the-Green (slightly to the north-east) is particularly beautiful: a continuous Georgian and Victorian terrace backing directly onto the Thames, with no road between the front doors and the river at high tide.
Hogarth's House on Great West Road is the summer villa of the painter William Hogarth, preserved as a small museum and surrounded by the mulberry tree he planted in the eighteenth century. Chiswick House and Gardens β a Palladian villa of 1729 set in extensive grounds designed by William Kent β is one of the finest examples of eighteenth-century landscape design in Britain and is managed by English Heritage. Both are worth combining into a half-day visit.
Kew and Richmond
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Kew Gardens is one of the greatest scientific and horticultural institutions in the world β a UNESCO World Heritage Site covering 132 hectares on the south bank of the Thames at Kew, containing over 50,000 living plant species, a seed bank holding seeds from over 40,000 species, and a research programme that contributes significantly to global understanding of plant biodiversity and conservation. For visitors, the gardens are extraordinary at any time of year: the great Victorian glasshouses (the Palm House, the Temperate House, the Princess of Wales Conservatory), the treetop walkway, the Japanese pagoda, and the extraordinary Waterlily House are among the highlights. Admission charge; free for Kew members and some National Trust/English Heritage members. Allow a full day.
Richmond
Richmond is the furthest point west in this guide and the one that feels most completely separate from the city. Richmond Park β 2,500 acres of ancient royal deer park, the largest urban park in Britain β is the defining fact about Richmond; everything else in the neighbourhood is arranged around the gravitational pull of this extraordinary space. The park contains two herds of wild red and fallow deer (over 600 animals in total), ancient trees including a veteran oak estimated at over 700 years, and views from the ridge above Richmond that take in St Paul's Cathedral on a clear day, sixteen miles to the east.
Richmond town centre, on the hill above the river, has one of the best high streets in outer London: independent shops, good restaurants, and several excellent pubs including the White Cross, whose riverside terrace floods at high tide, and the Cricketers on the green. Richmond Bridge, crossing the Thames to Twickenham, is the oldest surviving Thames bridge in London (1777).
Maida Vale and Little Venice
Maida Vale is one of the most consistently lovely residential neighbourhoods in west London β wide, tree-lined avenues of late-Victorian mansion blocks and Edwardian terraces that feel, in their combination of grandeur and leafiness, like a smaller and quieter version of Kensington. At its southern edge, where the Grand Union Canal meets the Regent's Canal, is Little Venice: a basin of canal water lined with moored narrowboats, overhanging willows, and a handful of cafes and restaurants that create, in summer especially, an atmosphere improbably Venetian in its tranquillity.
The canal towpath from Little Venice east towards Camden is one of the most pleasant urban walks in London β flat, car-free, and lined with narrowboats and gardens β and provides a completely different perspective on the city from any surface or underground route. The walk to Camden Lock takes about forty minutes at a leisurely pace; to Regent's Park zoo about twenty.
Bayswater
Bayswater sits between Notting Hill and Paddington and is one of the most consistently undervalued areas of west London β a neighbourhood that lacks a strong identity of its own but benefits from exceptional proximity to Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens, good transport connections, and a genuinely diverse restaurant scene along Queensway and its surrounding streets. For visitors to London, Bayswater hotels offer very good value relative to their central location; for eating, the Queensway strip has some of the better Chinese, Middle Eastern, and South Asian restaurants in west London.
Transport Summary for West London
The Central line and District line provide the main east-west connections across west London; the Jubilee line serves Maida Vale/Kilburn, Swiss Cottage, and Wembley in the north-west; the Overground serves Chiswick, Kew, and Richmond (via Richmond station, which is also served by the District line and South Western Railway). For Richmond and Kew from central London, the District line is the most reliable public transport option; the journey from Sloane Square takes about forty minutes. The Thames Clipper river bus service connects many riverside points in west London to the centre and East London β a pleasant alternative to the tube on fine days.