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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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#11
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"Jarle H Knudsen" wrote in message
. .. I have used http://www.london-discount-hotel.com/ to book a single room at St. Giles Hotel. at £70 incl. a decent breakfast. Both me and my sister has stayed there several times, so we must be satisfied. Not forgetting that you also get use of the YMCA gym/pool under the hotel. Ian |
#12
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On Wed, 18 Oct 2006 14:25:01 +0200, Jarle H Knudsen wrote:
I have used http://www.london-discount-hotel.com/ to book a single room at St. Giles Hotel. at £70 incl. a decent breakfast. It looks like the price has gone up to £79, and with a weak krone it's even more expensive for me :-( -- jhk |
#13
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On Tue, 17 Oct 2006 19:40:41 -0400, "Mark W. Shelby"
wrote: Hello, the wife and I are coming to London Nov. 2nd... I am shocked at the price of hotels there! It seems like every website I look at has "tourist" written all over it. Is there a local hotel chain that I could contact or is there a better way find a hotel in London that is not a rip off? Also, If we stay in a suburb of London is there bus or tube service into downtown? Thanks in advance for the info! This is a cut and paste from a post I made to another group when a similar request was made. The blue text below are the questions the original poster in the old thread asked - included to provide context to the subsequent text. ---- Here is a local East London hotel which offers something a little different, has a great bar and overlooks the edge of Epping Forest. http://www.a1tourism.com/uk/a46683.html http://www.fancyapint.com/main_site/...s/pub2733.html It is located between Leytonstone (Central Line) and Walthamstow (Victoria Line and main line trains). Frequent buses (route 257 stop right outside) and run from Stratford to provide the direct connection to your Airbus A9. You also a night bus from Central London (N55) to the front door of the pub. http://www.busmap.org/tt4/257.pdf http://www.busmap.org/tt4/N055.pdf As you have a hankering for Tesco supermarkets there is a huge one down the road from the pub (Leytonstone - Gainsborough Rd). There are also 3 between the pub and Walthamstow (!) http://www.multimap.com/clients/plac...o&client=tesco Details I am not sure of yet: (*1) We will use the Tube for all transportation, so Travelcards are the option to go I think. We arrive on a Friday morning, and head back on Monday evening, thats 4 days. Shall I get Oyster Cards (where? Stratford Station?) For the City Airport Hotel Zone 3 is good, the Barking Hotel needs a Zone 4 card. What do I need to get the Oyster, and what do I load onto it? Right this is a little complex so I hope you are paying attention. The choice of ticket is really dependent upon when you will travel (before 9.30 or after 9.30; i.e. peak or off peak) If you are simply going to be doing the tourist stuff and travelling off peak then off peak one day travelcards will give you access to all modes - bus, DLR, tube *and* National Rail (overground) services. The nearest tubes to my suggested hotel are in Zone 3 which will mean you need Z1-4 one day off peak travelcards. These can be bought from stations or from local newsagents / shops. You can also buy them in advance. These tickets are NOT on Oyster card format. You have said how many days you will be in London - if only a few days then this should be OK. If nearer a week then it may be better to get an Oyster card. One thing you should not do is pay cash for your tickets. Bus and Tube Fares are now very, very expensive if you opt to pay cash rather than buy a pre-purchased ticket. Oyster cards are a smartcard ticket that are read by placing the card on a reader on a ticket gate, validator or pad on the bus when you get on. An Oyster card can have two types of ticket on it - a Travelcard season ticket for a number of zones for 7 days, 1 month or any period up to one year. A Travelcard allows unlimited travel on all modes for the period of time you buy it for and for the zones you buy. Any travelcard is valid on all TfL bus services throughout Greater London (and on some that cross the boundary into adjacent counties). The second ticket product is what is called "Pay as you Go" or "Pre-Pay" (the old name for this). This means you load money onto the card and as you travel the money is deducted from the card but at a discounted price compared to paying cash. For example a bus ticket in cash is £1.50, using Oyster PAYG it is 80p (off peak) or £1 (peak). PAYG is valid for bus, DLR, Tube and only a very, very limited number of National Rail lines. In addition the pre-pay fares deducted from your card will vary by the zones you travel through and the times of day you travel. Cleverly the card keeps a running total of all your deductions in a day and if they exceed a pre-set limit (based on the nearest one day travelcard card price less 50p) the deductions are therefore "capped" and no more money is deducted. Providing you log your card in and out on every tube / dlr journey and on entry to every bus this "capping" will work automatically without you needed to do anything. If you opt to have a Travelcard ticket for a week then that will almost certainly cover your transport needs but they are priced as a commuter ticket so are not that cheap. If you are going to travel off peak then it may well be much better not to have a Travelcard but just to use pre-pay and top up your card as you go. The real things to decide are a) Will you travel regularly before 09.30 on a weekday b) Will you use National Rail services a lot. If you answer yes then get a 7 day travelcard, if not opt for Pre-Pay where you'll get a discount and get the benefit of the capped price. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/tfl/fares-tick...tfl-fares-2006... gives you loads and loads of fare information. Does one know an alternative to stay the three nights? Any nice B&B or Pub or something located closer to the city? See above for an East London selection. HTH (!) -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#14
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![]() "Jarle H Knudsen" wrote in message news ![]() On Wed, 18 Oct 2006 14:25:01 +0200, Jarle H Knudsen wrote: I have used http://www.london-discount-hotel.com/ to book a single room at St. Giles Hotel. at £70 incl. a decent breakfast. It looks like the price has gone up to £79, and with a weak krone it's even more expensive for me :-( -- jhk I tend to stay in Ibis, Travelodge or Travel Inn simply for the convenience - easy online booking, and you know what standard you're going to get. In London, I've often used Ibis Euston, about £80 per night I think. Just over the road from Euston mainline station, and 2 mins or less walk from Euston & Euston Square underground (which between them will take you to most of the tourist attractions), plus a decent number of buses and a taxi rank. James |
#15
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"Jarle H Knudsen" wrote in message
news ![]() It looks like the price has gone up to £79, and with a weak krone A good workout in the gym would help your weak krone! ;-) Ian |
#16
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![]() "Mark W. Shelby" wrote Hello, the wife and I are coming to London Nov. 2nd... I am shocked at the price of hotels there! It seems like every website I look at has "tourist" written all over it. Is there a local hotel chain that I could contact or is there a better way find a hotel in London that is not a rip off? Also, If we stay in a suburb of London is there bus or tube service into downtown? Thanks in advance for the info! As others have said London isn't cheap I've found http://www.hotels-london.co.uk/ to be very good - some serious discounts off rack rate As there's two of you something like an Ibis, Travel Inn or Travelodge would be ideal as they charge per room not per person. http://www.accorhotels.com/accorhotels/index.html http://www.premiertravelinn.com http://www.travelodge.co.uk/ My preference is Ibis - bit basic but clean, late bar, food available early to late There's one at Earls Court, Euston and Wembley (which is a bit out of town but right beside Wembley Stadium railway station) Ian |
#17
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Ian Cunningham wrote:
As others have said London isn't cheap I've found http://www.hotels-london.co.uk/ to be very good - some serious discounts off rack rate Here's another one that I've used for finding hotel rooms at the cheap end of the market: http://www.londonhotelreservation.com/deputy.htm. -- Joyce Whitchurch, Stalybridge, UK ================================= |
#18
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On 2006-10-18 00:40:41 +0100, "Mark W. Shelby" said:
Hello, the wife and I are coming to London Nov. 2nd... I am shocked at the price of hotels there! It seems like every website I look at has "tourist" written all over it. Is there a local hotel chain that I could contact or is there a better way find a hotel in London that is not a rip off? Also, If we stay in a suburb of London is there bus or tube service into downtown? Thanks in advance for the info! There are several good-value chains - Ibis, Jurys and Premier are the three that we use regularly. www.ibishotel.com www.jurysdoyle.com www.premiertravelinn.com There are also a couple of useful websites to try, including laterooms.com As a guide, those just outside the central area will be cheaper - but don't go too far out. Also, 06-09 November hotels in central and east London are busy with visitors to World Travel Mart. Hope this helps Ken |
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