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This Week's Walks - Archive

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This is an archive of walks done by the Saturday Walker's Club. You should only need to use this page if the SWC website is down.

Thursday, 29 January 2026

Evening Walk - The London Wall walk (parts thereof) with the Vibrance Festival of Light and Sound (by the Guildhall School)

The London Wall walk again, really???

Yes really, but just the first half of it to The Barbican, then we tick off the five sites of the Guildhall School’s Vibrance two-day Festival of Light and Sound extravaganza (3 of which are on the route anyway), which gets us to Guildhall Square (3.6 km walked). Then we either walk on (continue this walk, strike down to the Thames and walk some of this walk’s Roman Era Waterfront option, anything else) or retire for drink and food.  https://www.gsmd.ac.uk/vibrance         [Thanks go to Karan G for suggesting this]

Meet at 18.30 outside Tower Hill Underground Station’s Main Exit, facing Trinity Square.

 

Here the blurb for the normal London Wall walk:

This highly interesting walk follows as closely as possible the course of the London Wall as it would have run during Roman times around the settlement of Londinium, starting at the (medieval) fortress of the Tower of London and leading through the modern-day City of London past the sites of the former city gates to the westerly wall end at modern Blackfriars.

It also passes the site of the much older first Roman Fort (built AD 120) at the north westerly corner of the city, whose walls were later incorporated into the Wall (built ca. AD 190-230).Street levels would have been up to 7 metres lower than today, so many remaining parts of the Wall are now hidden from view in the basements of buildings or under roads, but the route still passes a surprisingly large number of publicly accessible exposed sections of the Wall above ground (plus one section below ground on an optional extension).

Wall parts as seen today have been much altered during the Middle Ages and some of the info panels or the walk directions point out these alterations. The route initially closely follows a signed London Wall Walk established by the Museum of London in 1984 for the section from the Tower to the Museum and passes the remaining info panels from that time plus several modern-day replacement panels.

At the end of the 3rd century, following a series of raids by Saxon pirates, an additional riverside wall along the Thames was added, but no evidence of it survives today. Nevertheless, two options are described to make this a circular walk, either along the modern-day waterfront or along the line of the Roman Era waterfront, which ran further inland.

Walk Options: 
Dropout points are aplenty along the route at tube stations or bus stops. 
An Extension leads to a large section of the Wall in the underground London Wall Car Park (320m each-way). 
The route can be made into a circular walk by following a choice of routes back to the Tower, both add 2.3 km to the route:
· The Thames Path along the modern-day waterfront (including several small diversions around river fronting residential or office buildings);
· A meandering route following as close as sensible the line of the Roman era waterfront.
 
Refreshments: Plenty , both en route and at the end of all walk options. Check the pdf for details. 
 
For walk directions, maps, height profiles, photos and gpx/kml files click here . t=short.47.a

2 comments:

Thomas G said...

n=5 on this walk, including one first-timer, but not including the person that suggested this outing, on a w=cold-but-dry evening.
Sensationally, 3 of the 5 had not walked the London Wall walk before despite numerous previous postings and good attendances on those. So we did walk the exact route, with the walk author doing his best to relay key info while keeping the tempo up so as not to freeze to death.
We got to exhibit 1 of the Vibrance Festival at about 19.15 and took an hour 15 or so to see them all, then struggled to find a place to eat (work-from-home seems to have died a death, certainly in the City), but eventually found a reassuringly old school Enoteca by Bow Church.
Tubes at just before 10.

As for Vibrance:
Is some of it pretty/instagrammable? Yes.
Is some of it using new-ish technologies and gizmos to produce art, sometimes interactive art at that? Yes.
Is some of it cutting edge/thought provoking/emotion evoking? Not sure.
Memorable? Not much.
Worth spending an hour and a bit of your time to see it all? Suppose so.
Highlight? The Guildhall Square projections (30 minutes worth of it, bring a flask of hot something).

Karan said...

In his unofficial role as a contributor to this walk :) this walker informs the walk poster that instead of joining the walk he was visiting the Canary Wharf lights, a similar social media fanfare for some now rather than people taking the time to see the art and read the information panels. Dinner options are indeed very busy and the winter light bites are not very appealing in frigid temperatures in the windy wharf.