Guest User
February 8, 2025
The waiters in the hotel are usually Indian/Pakistani who help you open the door of the hotel. Check-in and check-out are fast. Especially the check-out is fast, and they will ask you how your stay is and welcome to come again.
Especially the Indian restaurant (indogro... can't remember the name) on the first floor of the hotel, which specializes in Indian street food. Indian curry chicken tastes the best, and it tastes great with fried potato slices. One starter, one main course, the set price is 15 pounds. The dissert (dessert) is a bit greasy, 3 pounds, not recommended. Sitting in the hotel, watching the pedestrians walking around on the street, for guests who have traveled thousands of miles and just arrived at the hotel, it is especially relaxing. It is recommended to enjoy Indian street food in the hotel.
In the central park of Tvistock square garden opposite the hotel, a bunch of people are commemorated. The statue in the center is the owner of the history of this square, an earl (I don't remember the name), and the name of the square comes from his eldest son Tvistock. The statue is very similar to Mahatma Gandhi of India. Wearing India's national iconic textile---coarse cloth, with his head bowed deeply, he was meditating on the suffering and way out of society.
Surrounding the park are memorials to the earliest British women who joined the army (captain, a female medical soldier), famous writers and poets, etc. Almost every tree in the park has a history. The maple leaf acorn tree planted by Indian Prime Minister Nehru himself, the tree planted by the Japanese Peace Association, etc. This park is the main venue for the activities of the anti-war and peace associations.
Especially on the right side of the square, near the fence of the main street, there is a large piece of cement on the ground of the park. It is actually a cement monument, lying flat on the ground, with words engraved on it. It turns out that across the street from this cement slab is a bus station. On the morning of July 7, 2005, during rush hour, a red double-decker bus exploded in a terrorist explosion, killing 13 people. One side of the cement slab records historical events, and the other side is the names of 13 people, one row per person, arranged in an orderly manner. The cement is solid, and the dead are long. The 13 people who unfortunately lost their lives in the terrorist attack will lie here forever. They chose Twistock Square as their cemetery. The cement tombstone is slightly covered with moss, but it is solid and inconspicuous. It does not need to be erected to obstruct the view and does not take up space. It is very similar to the tombstones on the ground in the cemetery, allowing the world to always remember the horror and abomination of terrorists and terrorist attacks, and remember that peace is hard-won.
The hotel is extremely convenient to UCL University, and it is a 3-minute walk to UCL student center. The nearest subway stations are Euston square. and Russell square. Both are within a 5-minute walk. It is about 15-20 minutes walk from St. Pancras Railway Station, which is not far away.
Charles Dickens' former residence museum is about 15 minutes' walk away. It is worth recommending. For literature lovers, This is the best of times. This is the worst of times. This is the spring of hope, This is the winter of despair.. (This is the best of times, this is the worst of times. This is the spring of hope, this is the winter of despair...) Take a look at Dickens' former residence. This year marks the 100th anniversary of the opening of the former residence. The walls on the 5th floor are full of famous quotes from Dickens' works.
Let's immerse ourselves in the history and culture of London, taste the cultural wine that has been accumulated for three hundred years, and indulge in the streets and alleys...
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