Monday 1 September 2008

just gets more interesting every time i think about it

I'm not usually much of an enthusiast for the latest technology, Web 2.0, virtual remote desktop networking and what have you, but this evening, i think i might have been converted. I've been doing a lot of research to find a useful (and ideally cost-effective) platform on which to run my secret new City of London corporate treasure hunt activity, and I've found a utility where i can operate my phone from my laptop, which makes things an awful lot easier. Obviously i had to confuse myself horribly by trying to take on my phone of myself taking a picture of my handset on the screen on a backdrop of a picture of the phone (or something to that effect), but every time I think about it, the potential just grows and grows. I'd better get on with it. Watch this space.


Not literally this space. Just an idea of space. If you can watch an idea without form. And all credit to you if you can.

Thursday 31 July 2008

treasure hunt.


I'm doing a treasure hunt as well, and this baby is going to be huge

17th August
12pm (that's noon)
UNDISCLOSED LOCATION, City of London
Forget your Dr Kawashima... you want brain training? You'll get an assault course the like of which you've never witnessed.
£12 (or £10 if you bring three other people and form your own team)
see facebook page
or email andrew@showmethesquaremile.com for details



walking tours


I'm doing a couple of walking tours

10th and 24th August
2pm sharp
City of London Information Centre, south side of St Pauls Cathedral
Whoever turns up gets a really bloody good two hours of London history.
For a mere £6
here's a link to a map and things






Saturday 5 July 2008

The Exits at Bank Station part 3

When I get back to England, this guide is going to be further improved, with photos of all exits, where you can really get to from them, and (given how utterly futile it is to move between exits) which is the closest exit when you get off the tube, so you don't have to spend any more time weeping with frustration than is strictly necessary.

Thursday 19 June 2008

The Exits at Bank Station part 2

Well, that was interesting. I went down to Whitechapel for some sage guidance from the wise Adam Brichto of brickwallfilms (doing all sorts of exciting things in films), and on the way back I thought I'd spend a few minutes making a little guide to what happens when the unwitting traveller tries to leave Bank station. I'd love to say it was an easy undertaking, but quite frankly what happened was even more bizarre than I could have imagined. Having spent an entire hour going from exit to exit underground in the rush hour, I can attest the following with absolute certainty:

1) Once you get off the train, the only sane course of action is to head for the nearest exit. However long the traffic lights take to change above ground, you will never save time going underground. Unless it's raining fire, there's just no excuse. I have checked. It's just not worth it.

2) The morons who built the subway system for Bank station were both very evil and very very stupid, masters of the blind alley, the misleading sign and the completely purposeless line drawing. They hate you.

3) There is only one document in the entire world that explains what to do at Bank Station. And you can only get it in one place. Bank Station. It's called "Continuing your journey from Bank" which is nice. It's by no means perfect, but it does show you where the exits are, more or less.

I'm sure this breaches some copyright laws, but I'm putting it up on this site. Only not yet, because the blog is buggering around. I'll try again later. And after that, I'll put up a little sub-site showing what you actually see when you walk out of Bank Station.

You lucky people.

The Exits at Bank Station


This is just infuriating. I'm doing a walk this Sunday for the City of London Guides, and most of the nearby Underground Stations are closed. So I'm trying to direct people from Bank station, but it's nearly impossible because nobody has a list of where the exits from Bank station are. There are 9 of them, and for the uninitiated or those with no sense of direction, it can be very confusing. It's bad enough that Bank is an evil, twisting spaghetti junction underground. But this apparent refusal to allow people to leave in the direction they would like is simply wrong.

So here, for the benefit of anyone who wants to know, and because it's taken me a long time that I could easily have spent doing something much more useful, is the complete (as far as I know) list of exits from the Bank station booking hall.

Exit 1:....

actually I can't do this. I can't find it. I'm going to have to go to Bank and check. and take photos. and report back. But I will. And I'm going to do it for all the other exits from Tube stations in the City as well. Because quite frankly, this is annoying me.

Thursday 12 June 2008

to digress for a moment...

"Again they walked on in silence. They were nearing Clerkenwell Close, and had to pass a corner of the prison in a dark lane, where the wind moaned drearily. The line of the high blank wall was relieved in colourless gloom against a sky of sheer night. Opposite, the shapes of poverty-eaten houses and grimy workshops stood huddling in the obscurity. From near at hand came shrill voices of children chasing each other about--children playing at midnight between slum and gaol."

The Nether World by George Gissing, an almost unrelentingly miserable novel, yet beautiful, written by a man who married twice and very ill-advisedly, and was dead before the age of 50 from emphysema.

This Saturday I am undertaking a walk through Clerkenwell, the setting of the Nether World, an area of London that resonates with sadness and misery, and it's a place I really have a huge fondness for. Having just read The Nether World, I am even more caught up in the shoddy romance of the place. Hopefully, some of this partiality will come across this weekend, and I can feel that I have satisfied the rigours of my craft and entertained my audience. The most difficult thing is to fulfill one's own expectations. I want to cram into two hours some of the fascination with which I regard this corner of the city, the awe in which I hold its winding alleys and misshapen walls, and if not those then at least the joy in its strange stories and the lives of its endlessly fascinating inhabitants. And yet I fear that all I can convey is something vaguely entertaining about a history too remote to grasp. Perhaps I should have a watchword, so that I can muster, from the damp bricks of Corporation Row, from the curving path of Ray Street and the sunlight streaming down on Mount Pleasant some sense of the long and torrid path human experience has taken in these streets and fields, of the closeness of their lives to our own. Perhaps it should be "Gissing", as a tribute to the great man's grasp on the Hogarthian, effortlessly Londonish grime of Clerkenwell. Thanks George.

My walk is at Farringdon Station, 2pm this Saturday.

Wednesday 28 May 2008

It never rains...

And so to the middle season of the year, whatever it's called. I don't want to jinx it like last year (meteorological predictions having nothing to do with complex air pressure over the Pacific and everything to do with whether I say certain words or not) so I won't say the actual word. But we all know what it is. And it's traditionally the busiest time of the year for tour guides, what with all the tourists wandering around with money to spend and ignorance to combat. I'm doing my bit, more or less. And for the sake of the Clerkenwell and Islington Guides, and my part-time employers the Harlequin, (and hopefully my bank balance) I'm putting on a little peripatetic event followed by Pimms and lemonade.

There are always downsides a tie-in with hospitality providers, but the sticky issue of being beholden to the landlords is only the case if one runs regular tours, and is taking some kind of kickback. It's not professional, and it's not worth it.

It's actually quite a good thing that something else has potentially turned up. The temptation when planning a tour is always to spend far too much time on research into obscure side-issues and forget to concentrate on the really important things, the presentation, and remembering what's important. One more or less factoid found after three hours is not going to make or break it. Failing to engage the imagination of the audience, on the other hand, is a killer...

Plans have been mooted for a database index of facts to save having to check the same books over and over, but that depends to an extent on the willingness of Miss B, currently sleeping off what might generously be called overindulgence, having finished her degree, bar the shouting - literally, in this case, as she still has to take a viva for her project. It shouldn't be a problem, as long as she doesn't start arguing with the examiner...

Tuesday 13 May 2008

Six and Out


six hours of walking, and i'm officially knackered, perhaps even suffering from heat exhaustion. still, it's better than working for a living, and i made 35 people happy today which has to be good for the general stock of humanity. Two tours through the backstreets of the City to see some old churches doesn't sound that inviting, not on a beautiful, sitting in Finsbury Circus, drinking Pimms and watching the world (or at least its female contingent) go by sort of a day, but I'm glad I did it. Quite how I'm going to do it again tomorrow when i can barely feel my legs is another matter...

extra points if anyone knows where this photo was taken...

Tuesday 6 May 2008

surely not


Every way I've looked at it, I can't escape the impression that the angel is projectile vomiting. Did the sculptor not see it? Can I really talk about the high-relief quoins and neo-classical pastiche in dispassionate tones when all I can see is a cherub insouciantly yakking up a bunch of flowers?