Kensington***** The Royal Village – 207 Five-Star Reviews

(208 customer reviews )

High Street Kensington underground station, London (meet by the Wasabi restaurant at the end of the shopping arcade that links the station with the High Street))

Guided by Adam or David

Adult: £20 · Students & Seniors: £15 · Children: £5

Walk Times

Day Walk Type Start Time End Time
Thursday Weekly 2 pm 4 pm Winter Summer Reserve Online
Saturday Weekly 2 pm 4 pm Winter Summer Reserve Online

N.B. this walk will not take place on the following dates:

25-12-2025

Why go on the Kensington Walk?

  1. Kensington specialises in hiding the best of itself
  2. Kensington Palace
  3. Kensington Gardens
  4. Kensington Palace Gardens aka Millionaires’ Row
  5. London’s finest Conservation Area
  6. Byways and hidden lanes
  7. Georgian townhouses
  8. 1,000 years of history
  9. No end of famous people, past and present
  10. Grace and Favour Apartments aka The Old Stable Block
  11. The Kensington eyrie – London’s nonpareil penthouse
  12. Private art galleries
  13. Kensington Square – much-loved, dignified, time-honoured (17th-century)
  14. Hidden in plain sight – the High Street’s architectural prodigies and secrets*
  15. London’s one-of-a-kind mews
  16. Pub perfection
  17. Street furniture that tells many a tale
  18. The Victorian mortuary
  19. Tiny, tucked-away specialist shops
  20. A-List cafes and restaurants, international cuisine
  21. St Mary Abbots – “the cathedral of parish churches”
  22. Paved in gold – the UK’s wealthiest neighbourhood
  23. Paved in literary gold – poets’ and novelists’ Kensington
  24. Abundant trace evidence of Kensington’s past
  25. A fine collection of Ascot hats
  26. The Kensington airstrip
  27. Where they interrogated Nazi war criminals
  28. Well-connected guides – the locals know David and Adam
  29. Location, location, location**
  30. Bragging rights – anyone for sitting on a seat that’s held a royal bottom?
  31. A stunner – the only house in London designed by the Bridge of Sighs architect
  32. Japanese loos
  33. The three green men

*As Brynjulf put it in his review, “to look at buildings I have seen many times before without thinking much about them, and then being told to notice details and learning about art and history through these is really an eye-opener. The variety in the area is amazing…”

**Location, location, location because the Kensington cup runneth over with wonderful museums and galleries: Leighton House, Sambourne House, the Design Museum, the Royal College of Music Museum, the Royal Albert Hall, the Museum Quarter (the V & A, the Science Museum, the Natural History Museum), the Polish Institute and Sikorski Museum, the Royal Geographical Society, etc. The fit is perfect to make a whole day of it: a museum visit, a spot of lunch, the Kensington Walk and, well, how does tea at the Royal Albert Hall sound? Or tea and in due course an evening concert (or the Cirque de Soleil, which is what’s on at the time of writing). The point being Kensington is perfect for making the best possible use of your time.  As Alain de Botton says, we should be seeking not so much to lengthen time as densify the time we have left. There’s no place better to do that than Kensington.

Ok, that’s your checklist. Now let’s put it rather more mellifluously.

“What will I see?”

“Try this for a shortlist: the most remarkable small literary house on the planet; London’s most palatial residential street; the ensemble of townhouses that are the final flowering of ‘the Restoration idiom’ (aka the signature London house for 220 years); a Victorian mortuary; Brigitte Bardot; Prince William’s apartment; four sub-villages; details on the High Street that nobody else sees (there’s a shocking amount of violence there if you know where to look); London’s most delightful cul de sac; centuries-old barracks…

“That’s a very short shortlist. There are getting on for 150 ‘point-outs’ on the walk. But the walk’s not just a magic lantern. In the immortal words of John Constable, “we see nothing until we understand it.” By walk’s end you’ll have seen Kensington because you’ll understand it. Understand what it is about Kensington – understand how and why it’s the wealthiest district in the country. Understand the skull beneath the skin. Understand that all-important house in Holland Street – the one the famous actor lives in – ‘if you understand this one house in Kensington you understand London.’

Short read: London’s royal village.

Medium read: This one’s special. It’s rarely the first – or even the second or third walk people go on but when they do get round to taking it they often say it’s the one they liked the most. And no wonder, because“Royal Kensington is London at its best – picturesque, stimulating and full of character.”

Long read: Its parts are as delightful as London can provide: Europe’s most exclusive residential street; warmly handsome old Kensington Palace, home to the late Diana, Princess of Wales (and, latterly, Princes William and Harry); Kensington Gardens (all meadows, shaded walks, bowers and flower gardens, it might be the grounds of a stately home in some rural shire)…

London’s most attractive and unusual mews; its most delightful cul de sac; cobbled little soigné lanes, girt with pretty cottages and charming old shops; regal avenues, beautifully kept squares and a clutch of the world’s greatest museums.

Let alone Europe’s largest (and most astonishing) roof garden, the secluded townhouse of the greatest Londoner of the 20th-century, a matryoshka (Russian nesting dolls) of Kensington mini-neighbourhoods, grace and favour apartments, the most important centre outside Germany for the Nazi war trials, a “rising room,” an artistic tour de force made out of 41,300 matchsticks, the most exotically beautiful garden in London, ghostly figures behind a balustrade, the four great rivers of the Old Testament, the most remarkable small literary house on the planet, a secret eyrie and more history and colourful characters than you can shake a stick at.

Guided by David or Adam

IT ALL COMES DOWN TO THE GUIDING

   

N.B. the above is just a sampling of what’s mostly served up on David’s walk – this being London Walks, Adam’s walk will be stamped with its owner’s character and interests.

Want more? Here’s David’s Podcast about how he sometimes starts the walk and a good bit about Kensington 1,000 Years Ago

For good measure, here’s David’s podcast about “a nondescript corner of Kensington where you have 500 years of Kensington in the palm of your hand.”

And here are David’s Where to Eat in Kensington recommendations.

KENSINGTON WALK – THE PRACTICALS

The Kensington Walk takes place at 2 pm on Thursdays* and 2 pm on Saturdays. The meeting point is High Street Kensington Tube. When you come up the steps and go through the ticket barrier at High Street Kensington Tube you’ll see, directly in front of you, a short shopping arcade that leads out to the High Street. At the far end – the pavement (sidewalk) end – of the shopping arcade, just before it debouches out onto the High Street, is a Wasabi restaurant. The meeting point is on the pavement (sidewalk) directly outside the shopping arcade, right by the Wasabi restaurant.

*To be on the safe side always check the date on the calendar. Or heed the top-level announcements that read: Click for dates this walk does not take place.

On Thursdays, the walk is guided by Adam or David. On Saturdays, it’s guided by David. N.B. the walk ends back at High Street Kensington tube – or a few minutes walk away. 

THE WEATHER

Here’s what you need to know…

LONDON WALKS ADDED VALUE

Be sure to ask Adam or David or Corin for a toothsome recommendation or two if you’re feeling peckish after the walk

Or click here to listen to David’s Where to Eat in Kensington podcast.

And here’s David’s podcast about the Conservation Area David explores on his Kensington Walk.

CODA

Not in London but fancy going on this walk? Try the Sights & Secrets of Kensington Virtual Tour.

Want more walks like this? Check out our other literary tours of London.

 

Happy walkers at the end of the Kensington tour with guide Adam

Don’t just take it from us…

These are a distillation of David’s and Adam’s 161 reviews –

For the full monte, scroll down…

LONDON WALKS PRIVATE WALKS

If you can’t make one of the regularly scheduled, just-turn-up, Kensington***** The Royal Village – 207 Five-Star Reviews it can always be booked as a private tour. If you go private you can have the Kensington***** The Royal Village – 207 Five-Star Reviews walk – or any other London Walk – on a day and at a time that suits your convenience. We’ll tailor it to your requirements. Ring Fiona or Mary on 020 7624 3978 or email us at [email protected] and we’ll set it up and make it happen for you. A private London Walk – they’re good value for an individual or couple and sensational value for a group – makes an ideal group or educational or birthday party or office (team-building) or club outing.

GIVE THE GIFT OF LONDON WALKS

A private London Walk makes a fab gift – be it a birthday or anniversary or Christmas present or whatever. Merchandise schmerchandise (gift wrapped or not) – but giving someone an experience, now that’s special. Memories make us rich.

LONDON WALKS – STREETS AHEAD!

Don’t just take it from us.

OTHER TOURS YOU MAY LIKE

208 reviews for Kensington***** The Royal Village – 207 Five-Star Reviews

  1. Gwyneth

    Fabulous walk by the affable David! His knowledge of the area, buildings, residents and all brought to life in a very easy, entertaining and understandable way.
    History can sometimes be a slog but not in the hands of a local expert….thank you so much David from the 4 ladies who joined your tour on the 15/7.

  2. Carolyn Fahy

    I have explored many neighborhoods in London using an assortment of guide books or just wandering around to see what I could see. This has been rewarding but it has very nice to have the London Walks guides help me see and appreciate this great city even more. The more I learn, the more I see. I recommend them!

  3. Sonja

    My friend and I went on Kensington walk on 20th July 2023 and had really pleasant two hours. Our guide, David, is knowledgeable, enthusiastic and interesting speaker, who could make any topic appealing to his audience. I highly recommend this walk.

  4. Sakshi

    London walks is hands down my favorite thing to do whenever I visit London. I discovered them in 2018, started off with the Famous Square mile ( whoever I recommend that walk to is blown away by just how much you learn in just 2 hours!), and since then have done the Bloomsbury , Mayfair and Kensington walks. Even with just two days in London this go around, I packed in one walk each day. Cannot say enough about how wonderful David was on the Kensington Village walk- the keys he shared to really seeing London blew me away! All of the village seems to know and love him, the anecdotes he shared on why an Englishman’s home is his castle, how urban planning defined social mores- I could go on and on- were details that will stay with me. If you love history, and you want to get off the beaten path, go take a walk!!

  5. Gill

    Extremely interesting walking tour. I certainly recommend and I will be definitely be going on more.

  6. Sandra

    I honestly can’t recommend this walk highly enough. I have taken many walks and they are all very good but this one is special. Absolutely fascinating from start to finish. Brilliantly delivered as David brought this walk to life with his genuine enthusiasm and love of his subject. A gem of a walk. Don’t miss it.

  7. Sandra

    Royal Kensington – David. I can’t recommend this walk highly enough. I have taken many walks and they are all very good but this one is special. Absolutely fascinating from start to finish. Brilliantly delivered as David brought this walk to life with his genuine enthusiasm and love of his subject. A gem of a walk. Don’t miss it.

  8. Ben Solnit

    Adam draws you irresistibly into a Kensington state of mind. Tip top notch!

  9. anthea susan rutter

    The walk with David was fascinating and I learnt things about Kensington that I had no idea about, I would like to compliment him on a most interesting walk and his attention to details. For example having pictures plans etc to aid the discussion, I have done many London walks and every time I come to the UK from Melbourne Australia I do at least one. This one was probably the best, mainly because of David’s knowledge of the area and his preparation in terms of extra resources. I reckon its the best ten quid I have ever spent. Anthea

  10. Loraine

    David is an exceptional guide. He is not only a master of his beloved Kensington, but also friendly and considering. It was a very hot day and he kept that in mind, considering all age groups

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