Venue & Hospitality

Conference Dates: November 23-24, 2020

Hotel Services & Amenities

  • Audio/Visual Equipment Rental.
  • Business Center.
  • Business Phone Service.
  • Complimentary Printing Service.
  • Express Mail.
  • Fax.
  • Meeting Rooms.
  • Office Rental.
  • Photo Copying Service.
  • Secretarial Service.
  • Telex.
  • Typewriter.
  • Video Conference.
  • Video Messaging.
  • Video Phone.
  • ATM.
  • Baggage Storage.

Transportation

Driving Directions to

Route Map

About City

London is the political, economic and cultural capital of England, and its world category tour attractions are known across the world. It is a leading Global City. London is considered as a world cultural capital. It is the world’s most-visited city as measured by international arrivals. The Greater London space is exploding with attractions for guests of all ages. The Roman engineers referred the town as Londinium on the Thames River within the year AD 43. The town was attacked and destroyed. Then the Romans restored the city as London. The name Londinium then ‘London’ came from the Indo-Hittite of the traditional Britons within the year AD 61. London is the centre of the planet – and a world in one town, with a wealth of various cultures and communities across the capital, there are three hundred languages and culinary art from over seventy countries. Whereas English is the official language, many European languages are terribly wide spoken in and around London. Given the scale of the massive doctrine population, several different languages are utilized in standard of living.

Tower of London, Kew gardens, Palace of West Minster, St. Margaret’s church are the world heritage sites present in London. Tower bridge, Tower of London, St. Paul’s cathedral, Shakespeare globe, The London eye, Jewel house, The Buckingham palace, Trafalgar square are some of the major landmarks and buildings of London.  London is the home to number of Museums, Libraries, galleries and many sporting events. Its little wonder London is one of the world's top tourist destinations, attracting upward of 15 million visitors every year. Britain's capital city is a vibrant arts and entertainment center and 50 years after the Beatles, the country's music scene still rocks.

One of Britain's most iconic buildings, Buckingham Palace is also the scene of London's most popular display of pomp and circumstance, the Changing of the Guard. Drawing crowds at 11:30am in every season, this colorful and free display of precision marching and music also takes place at St. James's Palace.

Buckingham Palace was built in 1837 and has been the London residence of the Royal Family since Queen Victoria's accession. One of Britain's most iconic structures, this spectacular World Heritage Site offers hours of fascination for visitors curious about the country's rich history after all, so much of it happened here. Inside the massive White Tower, built in 1078 by William the Conqueror is the 17th-century Line of Kings with its remarkable displays of royal armaments. Other highlights include the famous Crown Jewels exhibition, the Beefeaters, the Royal Mint, and gruesome exhibits about the executions that took place on the grounds. The adjacent Tower Bridge, its two huge towers rising 200 feet above the River Thames is one of London's best known landmarks.

Displaying one of the world's finest collections of antiquities, the British Museum contains more than 13 million artifacts from the ancient world. Nothing says "London" has more emphatically than the 318-foot tower housing the giant clock and its resounding bell known as Big Ben. It is as iconic a landmark as Tower Bridge. Ranking among the top art museums in the world, London's National Gallery represents an almost complete survey of European painting from 1260 until 1920. The museum's greatest strengths are in its collections of Dutch Masters and Italian Schools of the 15th and 16th centuries. The Victoria and Albert Museum is part of a South Kensington-based group of museums that includes the Natural History Museum and Science Museum. Founded in 1852, the V&A covers close to 13 acres and contains 145 galleries spanning some 5,000 years of art and related artifacts. Exhibits include ceramics and glass, textiles and costumes, silver and jewelry, ironwork, sculpture, prints, and photos. Two of London's best-known tourist spots, these famous squares lie not far apart and mark the gateways to Soho, London's lively theater and entertainment district. Another location with a long association with British royalty, Westminster Abbey stands on a site that's been associated with Christianity since the early 7th century. The largest and most famous of London's many churches - and undoubtedly one of the most spectacular cathedral's in the world - St. Paul's Cathedral sits atop the site of a Roman temple. Built to mark London's millennium celebrations in 2000, the London Eye is Europe's largest observation wheel. Another great Thames-side attraction, Hampton Court is one of Europe's most famous palaces. Its Great Hall dates from Henry VIII's time and it's where Elizabeth I learned of the defeat of the Spanish Armada

 

 

 

Attractions & Landmarks

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