Resultado da Busca
There are 5 ways to get from Marylebone to Oxford Street by subway, bus, taxi, or foot. Select an option below to see step-by-step directions and to compare ticket prices and travel times in Rome2rio's travel planner.
- The cheapest way to get from Marylebone to Oxford Street is to bus which costs £1 - £3 and takes 7 min. More details
- The quickest way to get from Marylebone to Oxford Street is to taxi which costs £19 - £23 and takes 3 min. More details
- Yes, there is a direct bus departing from Baker Street Station station and arriving at Oxford Circus Station station. Services depart hourly, and o...
- Yes, there is a direct train departing from Baker Street station station and arriving at Oxford Circus. Services depart every five minutes, and ope...
- It is approximately 4255 feet to get from Marylebone to Oxford Street.
- The best way to get from Marylebone to Oxford Street without a car is to subway which takes 3 min and costs £2 - £4. More details
- The subway from Baker Street station to Oxford Circus takes 3 min including transfers and departs every five minutes. More details
- Marylebone to Oxford Street bus services, operated by London United, depart from Baker Street Station. More details
- Marylebone to Oxford Street train services, operated by London Underground (Tube), depart from Baker Street station. More details
- Marylebone to Oxford Street bus services, operated by London United, arrive at Oxford Circus Station. More details
- The Wallace Collection
- Marylebone Parish Church
- British Dental Association Museum
- Anaesthesia Heritage Centre
- BBC Broadcasting House
- Regent’s Park
- Sherlock Holmes Museum
- St James Spanish Place
- Wigmore Hall
- Wimpole Mews
The Wallace Collection is one of London’s most fabulous free museums– an extensive collection of art and furniture in a beautiful stately home on Manchester Square. The collection was put together by four subsequent Marquesses of Hertford and Sir Richard Wallace (widely thought to be the illegitimate son of the fourth Marquess of Hertford – seeming...
Marylebone’s population expanded rapidly in the 18th century – with the result that a new parish church was needed to replace the now-destroyed St Mary-by-the-Bourne (aha, we sense the origins of a name) church. The grandeur of the new Marylebone Parish Church may be diminished by its unattractive location on the heaving Marylebone Road but it’s an...
You know how we love a weird museum and it just so happens that Marylebone is blessed with two that our editor, Julianna, featured in her Unusual London Book. The first, the small museum in the British Dental Association is a jaw-clenchingly frank jaunt through the (sometimes unpleasant) history of dentistry. Think dentists are something to be scar...
You’ll find the second of Marylebone’s quirky museum offerings in the basement of the Association of Anaesthetists. If the name didn’t give it away, the Anaesthesia Heritage Centreis dedicated to all things in the world of anaesthesia and pain relief. Don’t knock it – it’s surprisingly interesting – walking you through the evolution of one of the m...
The grand art-deco buildings of BBC Broadcasting House are nothing if not controversial – even now, coming on to a century after its completion. Designed by G Vaal Myers, the Portland-stone clad structure was the first purpose-built broadcasting building. Totally worth seeing, if only for the giant sculptures on its exterior – Prospero and Arielby ...
The grandest of London’s Royal Parks, Regent’s Park is a purpose-built pleasure ground enjoyed by locals and tourists alike. Where else in the city can you find a park with an extensive rose garden, zoo, canal, outdoors theatre and boating lake? Realistically, only the southern reaches fall within Marylebone itself but it would be a shame not to ex...
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s detective famously resided at 221B Baker Street – the very location where you’ll now find The Sherlock Holmes Museum. As the name suggests – the space is dedicated to the deerstalker wearing, cigar puffing detective – complete with recreations of the residence lived in by Holmes and his famous sidekick, Dr John Watson.
You have the architect Edward Goldie to thank for the striking Gothic beauty of St James church. Eye-catching as it is from the outside – the inside hides one of the most artistic English Gothic interiors in the city and which looks much older than it is (it was finished in 1890). The Spanish Place is a reference to the time when Hertford House – n...
The relatively small confines of Wigmore Hallmay not quite be where you’d expect to find one of London’s best concert halls but hey, nothing is ever quite what it seems. The hall was first built in 1901 (when it went by the name of Bechstein Hall) and is famed for its near-perfect acoustics. Those acoustics – and the plush interior – have made it a...
Like most posher parts of London, Mayfair is dotted with a number of mews. Wimpole Mews is the prettiest of the area’s offerings. It also stands out for being the location where many of the key events of the scandalous Profumo Affair played out in the sixties.
Thankfully Oxford Street has four Stations, Marble Arch, Bond Street, Oxford Circus and Tottenham Court Road serving it such that congestion is minimised as much as is possible. Oxford Street has a wealth of shops, including three separate malls and many restaurants.
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- Oxford Street, W1, Marylebone
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Oxford Street is a major road in the City of Westminster in the West End of London, running from Tottenham Court Road to Marble Arch via Oxford Circus. It marks the notional boundary between the areas of Fitzrovia and Marylebone to the north, with Soho and Mayfair to its immediate south.
Divididos pela movimentada Oxford Street, Mayfair e Marylebone são bairros elegantes e sofisticados, caracterizados por residências requintadas, restaurantes de alta qualidade e lojas de grife.