the Sky Garden at 20 Fenchurch Street:
my Trip Advisor review

Thurs, 10 March 2016, 11:23 am: Following is my Trip Advisor review of the Walkie Talkie building’s Sky Garden at 20 Fenchurch Street in the City of London. If you’re a supporter of any or all things Matt, please click here to go to the actual page and give it a thumbs up.

20160310_112310I’ll leave the debate over 20 Fenchurch Street’s exterior appearance to the architects and the city planners. All that matters is what you behold from the viewing platforms thirty-five stories above London.

To visit the Sky Garden has no financial cost. The only requirement is to reserve a time in advance. The views are spectacular. Consider the magnificent value of this opportunity and contrast it with London’s two other most famous aerial lookouts.

Admission to the top of the Shard is twenty-six pounds (thirty-one if you fail to book ahead of time). Additionally, as the fourth tallest building in all of Europe, the Shard is too high above many of London’s sights to let you view them in the detail offered by the Sky Garden. And though on an overcast day the infamous London fog may obscure some of the viewing at the Sky Garden’s level, the Shard will have you straining to see some areas at all through the entirety of the fog. Any romance in being above the clouds is quickly sapped when you’ve paid good money and can’t see through ’em.

To ride the London Eye starts at just over twenty-one pounds. Its rotation’s peak height puts it just under the Sky Garden’s level, so views are comparable. But you’re limited to thirty minutes on the wheel, and because you’re constantly in (admittedly slow) motion you can’t linger on any sight as you can at the Garden or the Shard, where you can stay as long as you like. (Well, I suppose if you were there all day, a staffer might eventually shoo you downstairs. Has that happened to anyone reading this?)

If you’re looking forward to enjoying a beautiful expansive garden in the sky, as hyped by initial artists’ renderings, I advise deflating those expectations. But if you’re looking for breathtaking views of everything in central London for absolutely no money, go ahead and get excited. From now on, this is where I’m bringing all my friends and clients who’ve never been to London before on the first day they see this great city with me.

“Sky Garden?” Maybe more
like “Sky Small Section of
Overgrown Shrubbery.”

Thurs, 10 March 2016, 10:48 am: Here’s what the Sky Garden looked like in an artist’s rendering in 2010.sky garden_2010 artist renderingHere’s what the most garden-y looking area of the Sky Garden looked like when I was there.

20160310_104842So, rather than having nature all around you as you meander from glass wall to glass wall, what really happens when you visit the Sky Garden is that you meander from glass wall to glass wall and at one point you walk around this one large patch of out-of-control greenery. Like my Florida backyard every three days during the summer, it looks like someone needs to take a commercial grade lawnmower to it. Unlike my yard (otherwise certain of my friends would want to come over more often), I’m pretty sure I see some marijuana growing in here.

20160310_104844Take the free ride to the top of 20 Fenchurch Street for the can’t-beat-’em views of everything in central London. Don’t come up here expecting anything from the name “Sky Garden” to rival the grounds of Versailles, Kew Gardens, or even those silly sculpted topiary characters at Disney World.

20160310_105358Behind that glass (in the photo above) is a bar/restaurant, from which you can look down and see… this same patch of unkempt mini-jungle. Maybe if you imbibe enough of their 13.50 pound glasses of champagne (that’s $19.72 for one glass of bubbly) it starts to look like Powerscourt Gardens.

In fairness, I think there are a few rows of plants or flowers judiciously spaced around the three stories that comprise the viewing areas, but I assure you, there is nothing like this:

sky garden_2010 artist rendering 2                     There is a central standing room only bar with reasonable prices….

20160310_114544              …and a pleasant space to grab a table and eat or drink next to the overlooks.

20160310_114602So, while Londoners got botanically cock-teased, they also got new unbeatable 360 degree views of their ever-evolving city. My prior post shows this off. And again, there is no cover charge to come up here, and you can stay as long as you like.

This piece will tell and show you more of what the Sky Garden was originally intended to look like.

London from on high

Thurs, 10 March 2016, 10:36 am: Atop 20 Fenchurch Street, let’s take a look at London from thirty-five floors and one hundred fifty-one metres up.

20160310_103622                                        The Shard, the tallest building in London

20160310_103624                                     the River Thames at the base of The Shard

20160310_103722                                         Tower Bridge (center) and City Hall (right)

20160310_104150                               the HMS Belfast, moored just to the west of City Hall

20160310_104200                                                                Tower Bridge

20160310_105436       Millennium Bridge (center) and Blackfriars Bridge (above it, from this perspective)

20160310_110626                                         30 St Mary Axe… like anyone really calls it that

20160310_111324                                                               the Tower of London

20160310_114326                                                         the London Monument

20160310_105332                                   St. Paul’s, and a whole bunch of construction cranes

Some assessments have been rather negative, but I thoroughly enjoyed my ninety minutes in the Sky Garden.

You get the sky part, but why is it called a garden? You’ll see some of the justification for that in my next post. Meantime, here’s one of the many videos I shot on the observation decks.