The Oval Cricket Ground – London

The Oval Cricket Ground – London

The Oval, presently referred to as the Kia Oval due to a current commercial sponsorship deal, is an international cricket ground in Kennington, in the London Borough of Lambeth. The Oval is the home ground of Surrey County Cricket Club, and also traditionally hosts the final Test match of each English summer season in late August or early September.

Out Of Order Sculpture – London

Out Of Order Sculpture – London

One of the more unusual sights in Kingston (in southwest London) is several disused red telephone boxes that have been tipped up to lean against one another in an arrangement resembling dominoes. This sculpture by David Mach was commissioned in 1988 and is called Out of Order. Kingston upon Thames is the principal settlement of the Royal Borough of Kingston

Bridge of Sighs – Oxford, England

Bridge of Sighs – Oxford, England

Hertford Bridge, popularly known as the Bridge of Sighs, is a skyway in Oxford, England. The bridge is often referred to as the Bridge of Sighs because of its supposed similarity to the famous Bridge of Sighs in Venice. However, Hertford Bridge was never intended to be a replica of the Venetian bridge, and indeed it bears a closer resemblance to the Rialto Bridge in the same city

Radcliffe Camera – Oxford, England

Radcliffe Camera – Oxford, England

The Radcliffe Camera (colloquially, “Rad Cam”;) is a building in Oxford, England, designed by James Gibbs in the English Palladian style and built in 1737–1749 to house the Radcliffe Science Library. The building is the earliest example in England of a circular library. It is built in three main stages externally and two stories internally, the upper one containing a gallery

Church of the Holy Cross – Mwnt, Wales

Church of the Holy Cross – Mwnt, Wales

The Church of the Holy Cross (Welsh: Eglwys y Grog) in Mwnt is an example of a medieval sailor’s chapel of ease. The site is said to have been used since the Age of the Saints, but the present building is probably 14th century. Mwnt was a civil parish in its own right for several centuries, but before the 17th century it was a detached chapelry of the parish of Llangoedmor.

Hungerford Bridge – London

Hungerford Bridge – London

The Hungerford Bridge crosses the River Thames in London, and lies between Waterloo Bridge and Westminster Bridge. It is a steel truss railway bridge—sometimes known as the Charing Cross Bridge—flanked by two more recent, cable-stayed, pedestrian bridges that share the railway bridge’s foundation piers, and which are properly named the Golden Jubilee Bridges.

Prior Park Landscape Garden – Bath, England

Prior Park Landscape Garden – Bath, England

Prior Park Landscape Garden is an 18th-century landscape garden, designed by the poet Alexander Pope and the landscape gardener Capability Brown, and now owned by the National Trust. It is south of Bath, Somerset, England by Ralph Allen Drive, and 1.2 km from the Kennet and Avon canal path. The garden was influential in defining the style of garden known as the “English garden”

South Portland Street Suspension Bridge – Glasgow

South Portland Street Suspension Bridge – Glasgow

The South Portland Street Suspension Bridge is one of the many historic bridges across the River Clyde in Glasgow. Construction of the bridge started in 1851 and was completed in 1853. It links Clyde Street and the Tiger Lucky Eight mural near St Andrews Cathedral on the north bank with Carlton Place and the Glasgow Sheriff Court on the south.

Honister Slate Mine – Lake District, England

Honister Slate Mine – Lake District, England

The Honister Slate Mine is a group of slate mines and quarries located at the top of the Honister Pass in the Lake District in England. The earliest reference to quarrying at this location is from 1728. In the mid-1920s, brilliantly engineered aerial ropeways served the Honister and Yew Crags Mines, though the external Yew Crags incline continued to be used until the late 1960s.

Bodiam Castle – East Sussex, England

Bodiam Castle – East Sussex, England

Bodiam Castle is a 14th-century moated castle near Robertsbridge in East Sussex, England. It was built in 1385 by Sir Edward Dalyngrigge, a former knight of Edward III, with the permission of Richard II, ostensibly to defend the area against French invasion during the Hundred Years’ War. Its corners and entrance are marked by towers, and topped by crenellations.

St. Mary’s Church – Hedgerley, UK

St. Mary’s Church – Hedgerley, UK

Hedgerley is a village and civil parish in South Bucks district in Buckinghamshire, England. The parish is 1.5 miles west of Gerrards Cross and 3 miles south-east of Beaconsfield. Above the village on the hillside is the Church of England parish church of Saint Mary the Virgin that was designed by the Gothic Revival architect Benjamin Ferrey and built in 1852.