Welcome to Visit Kensal Green Places The Walkfo guide to things to do & explore in Kensal Green
Visit Kensal Green places using Walkfo for free guided tours of the best Kensal Green places to visit. A unique way to experience Kensal Green’s places, Walkfo allows you to explore Kensal Green as you would a museum or art gallery with audio guides.
Visiting Kensal Green Walkfo Preview Kensal Green (or Kensal Rise) is an area in north-west London, in the London boroughs of Brent and Kensington and Chelsea. The area has seen significant gentrification over recent years, attracting people from surrounding areas such as Notting Hill and Queens Park. It is now characterised by numerous independent stores, restaurants, pubs, and cafes. When you visit Kensal Green, Walkfo brings Kensal Green places to life as you travel by foot, bike, bus or car with a mobile phone & headphones.
Kensal Green Places Overview: History, Culture & Facts about Kensal Green
Visit Kensal Green – Walkfo’s stats for the places to visit
With 460 audio plaques & Kensal Green places for you to explore in the Kensal Green area, Walkfo is the world’s largest heritage & history digital plaque provider. The AI continually learns & refines facts about the best Kensal Green places to visit from travel & tourism authorities (like Wikipedia), converting history into an interactive audio experience.
Kensal Green history
Originally part of one of the 8 manors within the district of Willesden, Kensal Green is first mentioned in 1253, translating from old English meaning the King’s Holt (King’s Wood). Its location marked the boundary between Willesden and the then Chelsea & Paddington, on which it remains today. It formed part of one of 10 manors, most likely Chamberlayne Wood Manor, named after Canon Richard de Camera (of the Chambers). In the 15th century the then Archbishop of Canterbury Henry Chichele (1414–1443), acquired lands in Willesden and Kingsbury. In 1443 he founded All Souls’ College, Oxford and endowed it with the same lands in his will. As a resultant, most of Willesden and Kensal Green remained largely agricultural until the mid-1800s, well into the Victorian era. In 1805, the construction of the Grand Junction Canal passed through the district to join the Regent’s Canal at Paddington. As the combined Grand Union Canal, this allowed passage of commercial freight traffic from the Midlands to London Docks, and hence onwards to the River Thames. There were two dairy farms in Kensal Green by the early 1800s, which expanded greatly after the 1864 Act of Parliament which made it illegal to keep cattle within the City of London. Although by the late 1800s residential development had greatly reduced the farmland, still in the 1890s many sheep and pigs were raised in the district. One of the farms later became a United Dairies creamery, supplied by milk trains from Mitre Bridge Junction. St. John’s Church was built on the corner of what is now Harrow Road/Kilburn Lane in 1844 and was extensively refurbished in 2017 and fitted with new bells in anticipation of the 175th anniversary in 2019. The church was followed by a school, now Bales College, and more inns including The Plough on the opposite corner of the junction. In 1832 Kensal Green Cemetery was incorporated by Act of Parliament and opened in January 1833. This led to a revaluation of the surrounding lands, and in 1835 ecclesiastical commissioners were appointed by the Crown, who reported in 1846 that: “the larger portion of the Prebendal Estates possess, in our opinion, a value far beyond their present agricultural value.” With enough people living locally to create a new parish, in 1844 St. John the Evangelist Church in Kilburn Lane was consecrated. The 1851 census records just over 800 people living in the new parish. In the 1860s, Kensal Green manor house, situated where Wakeman Road joins Harrow Road, was demolished. Rapid increase in residential development followed, firstly with land west of Kilburn High Road, followed by the sale of Banister’s Farm leading to the development of Bannister Road and Mortimer Road. Unfortunately at this time Kensal Green was suffering huge social problems and had a reputation of being a slum, with 55% off its residents living in poverty and squalor, despite being neighbours to thriving Queen’s Park.The rapid residential development led to local commissioners reporting in 1880 that there was inadequate drainage and sewerage facilities, with most houses having only improved access to what were the old agricultural drains. In that same year, All Souls’ College started to develop its lands north-west of Kilburn Lane, including All Souls’ Avenue and College Road, with adjacent roads being named after leading Fellows of the college, and the installation of new sewerage facilities across the district. The college donated lands on which to build Kensal Rise Reading Room, to commemorate the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria, in 1897. Opened by American author Mark Twain in 1901, it was later extended and renamed Kensal Rise Library. The developments of the streets around Kensal Rise railway station date from the last 10 years of the 19th century and the first decade of the 20th. Although opened in April 1873 as Kensal Green at Chamberlayne Wood, then a remote dead end road; it was renamed Kensal Rise on 24 May 1890. Just north of the station the National Athletic Ground (one of the many early grounds of Queen’s Park Rangers) opened in 1890. The ground which was later renamed the Kensal Rise Athletic Stadium also hosted cycling and athletics competitions before being turned over to housing in the 1920s. For a brief period before 1914 the Aeroplane Building and Flying Society had its headquarters at Kensal Rise and flew test gliders from the site. Kensal Green also boasted the Electric Pavilion Cinema which opened in November 1914 and was located on the corner of Chamberlayne Road and Bannister Road. The construction of the Great Western Railway started in 1835, with the first 22.5 miles (36.2 km) of line, from Paddington station to Maidenhead Bridge station, opened on 4 June 1838. In 1901, its major carriage washing and servicing facilities and locomotive depot were developed at Old Oak Common, bringing further employment and more immigrants to the district. The first major immigrant population had been Irish people fleeing the Great Irish Famine, and then post-World War I. In World War II, due to the railway facilities, the district suffered greatly from German Luftwaffe bombing. After the war, the area became a refuge for the first Afro-Caribbean born contingent. In the 1960s the College disposed of many freeholds, while retaining land in Willesden. Since the 1980s, the Irish-born community has reduced in size, although the legacy of their presence remains, not least in the number of Irish pubs and organisations and the many thousands with Irish ancestry who continue to populate the area. According to statistics from the 2001 census, the area has a very high proportion of young residents (28.4% 25–44 years old) and a very high educational level (30.7% hold a first degree or better). The area has seen significant gentrification over recent years as people have been priced out of surrounding areas such as Notting Hill. In 2015 it was described as ‘celebrity haunt-meets-Nappy Valley’.
Why visit Kensal Green with Walkfo Travel Guide App?
You can visit Kensal Green places with Walkfo Kensal Green to hear history at Kensal Green’s places whilst walking around using the free digital tour app. Walkfo Kensal Green has 460 places to visit in our interactive Kensal Green map, with amazing history, culture & travel facts you can explore the same way you would at a museum or art gallery with information audio headset. With Walkfo, you can travel by foot, bike or bus throughout Kensal Green, being in the moment, without digital distraction or limits to a specific walking route. Our historic audio walks, National Trust interactive audio experiences, digital tour guides for English Heritage locations are available at Kensal Green places, with a AI tour guide to help you get the best from a visit to Kensal Green & the surrounding areas.
Walkfo Kensal Green tourism map key: places to see & visit like National Trust sites, Blue Plaques, English Heritage locations & top tourist destinations in Kensal Green
Best Kensal Green places to visit
Kensal Green has places to explore by foot, bike or bus. Below are a selection of the varied Kensal Green’s destinations you can visit with additional content available at the Walkfo Kensal Green’s information audio spots:
Frontline Club Frontline Club is a media club and registered charity located near Paddington Station in London . It aims to champion independent journalism and promote diversity and professionalism in the media .
The Lancasters The Lancasters is a residential development in London, England, with 77 apartments . The majority of the apartments face south with views onto or across Hyde Park .
Shepherd’s Bush Conservation Area Shepherd’s Bush Conservation Area is one of a number of areas in Hammersmith and Fulham which have been designated for conservation. Broadly speaking it encompasses Shepherd’s Green and its immediate environs, including many streets north of the Green.
Paddington Recreation Ground Paddington Recreation Ground is the largest area of parkland in the City of Westminster . It was the first park of its kind in London, having operated since 1888 . Annually, it attracts over 1.5 million users, who visit the Recreation Ground for its green-space value .
Chepstow Place Chepstow Place is a street in London that runs from the junction of Westbourne Grove and Pembridge Villas in the north to the south . It is crossed by Dawson Place and joined on its eastern side by Rede Place .
Theatre Royal, Marylebone The Theatre Royal, Marylebone was built in 1831 and was a music hall, cinema and warehouse . It was damaged by fire in 1962, when it was demolished .
The Star, St John’s Wood The Star was a pub at 38 St John’s Wood Terrace in St John’s Wood, in the City of Westminster, London, for approximately 200 years . The Westminster City Council listed it as an asset of community value in 2015 . In 2017 it reopened as a gastropub .
Klooks Kleek Klooks Kleek was a jazz and rhythm n’ blues club on the first floor of the Railway Hotel, West Hampstead, north-west London. Named after “Klook’s Clique”, a 1956 album by jazz drummer Kenny Clarke. Zoot Money, Ten Years After, John Mayall and Graham Bond recorded live albums at the club.
Queen’s Gardens, Westminster Queen’s Gardens, Westminster is a garden square in the Bayswater district of the City of Westminster in London . The square is located in the centre of the city of Westminster .
Cleveland Square Cleveland Square is a private and gated garden square in the Bayswater district of the City of Westminster, north of Central London’s Hyde Park . The housing is in tall, tree-shaded rows, stuccoed and with pillared porches .
Visit Kensal Green plaques
253 plaques hereKensal Green has 253 physical plaques in tourist plaque schemes for you to explore via Walkfo Kensal Green plaques audio map when visiting. Plaques like National Heritage’s “Blue Plaques” provide visual geo-markers to highlight points-of-interest at the places where they happened – and Walkfo’s AI has researched additional, deeper content when you visit Kensal Green using the app. Experience the history of a location when Walkfo local tourist guide app triggers audio close to each Kensal Green plaque. Explore Plaques & History has a complete list of Hartlepool’s plaques & Hartlepool history plaque map.
Experience Kensal Green audio walks & tours
Walkfo guides for things to do / places to visit in Kensal Green allows exploration as you would do an art gallery or museum. Walk close to one of Kensal Green’s 460 historic places & our digital tour guide will create an audio story for that spot. With headphone connected, you can explore Kensal Green freely by foot, bike or bus – with your own personal tour guide in your pocket.
Explore Kensal Green Map App
Our visit Kensal Green map shows you things-to-do & places you can visit in Kensal Green & surrounding areas using the Walkfo digital audio tour guide app. Each spot has plaque, building, street or area information on history, culture or tourism.
You can set your Walkfo’s Kensal Green tourist map to find historic & tourism spots within 1km, 3km & 5km of the Kensal Green centre, depending on how far you plan to explore whilst you visit Kensal Green area at LONG:-0.2248, LAT:51.5308.
Walkfo App
Walkfo
Walkfo is free to download & use (for a limited time period), so if you are looking to explore Kensal Green, go to your App Store to search for “Walkfo” or follow a links below and install on your mobile phone. Walkfo is designed for use with headphones or AirPods, so you can walk & explore whilst learning about the things around you without digital distraction.
Things to do & visit in Kensal Green / surrounding areas
● Swan Inn ● St James’s Church, Paddington ● The Mitre, Bayswater ● Lancaster Gate ● Lancaster Gate Memorial Cross ● Frontline Club ● Hilton London Paddington ● The Lancasters ● Round Pond (London) ● Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Thyateira and Great Britain ● Paddington ● Douglas House, London ● Hempel Hotel ● Acton Green, London ● Acton, London ● Acton Vale, London ● London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham ● Kensington division ● East Acton ● St Thomas Cathedral, Acton ● Ginger Pig ● St Gabriel’s Church, North Acton ● Church of the Holy Ghost and St Stephen ● Princess Victoria (public house) ● Cleverly estate ● Royal Masonic Hospital ● Gypsy Corner ● St Andrew Bobola Church, Hammersmith ● Ravenscourt Park ● West Acton
● Cathnor Park ● The Queen Adelaide ● Stamford House ● Old Oak and Wormholt ● Wormholt Park ● LH2 Studios ● Western Avenue, London ● Sipsmith ● Shepherd’s Bush murders ● HM Prison Wormwood Scrubs ● Townhouse Studios ● Brackenbury Village ● Bush Hall ● Strange Fruit (club) ● Shepherd’s Bush ● Queen Charlotte’s and Chelsea Hospital ● Hammersmith Hospital ● St Stephen’s Church, Shepherd’s Bush ● Little Wormwood Scrubs ● St Mary’s Catholic Cemetery, Kensal Green ● Wormwood Scrubs ● Fulham Irish GAA Club ● Old Oak Common ● Linford Christie Stadium ● Park Ward ● Mulliner Park Ward ● Kensal Green Cemetery ● Willesden TMD ● Kensal Green ● Tomb of Charles Spencer Ricketts ● Princess Louise Hospital ● North Kensington ● Old Oak Common TMD ● Kensal Rise Library ● St Charles’ Hospital ● Dissenters’ Chapel, Kensal Green ● Kensal House ● White City Place ● 1908 Summer Olympics ● White City Stadium ● Westway (London) ● The Flora ● White City, London ● Franco-British Exhibition ● West Cross Route ● Kensal Town ● Harlesden ● 2001 BBC bombing ● Emslie Horniman’s Pleasance ● Acton Lane Power Station ● Grenfell Tower fire ● Grenfell Tower ● Aftermath of the Grenfell Tower fire ● Hammersmith Park ● Instituto Español Vicente Cañada Blanch ● Wood Lane ● Lancaster West Estate ● North Acton ● Television Centre, London ● Lisboa Patisserie ● Museum of Brands ● Cobden Club ● Kensington Leisure Centre ● I Was Lord Kitchener’s Valet ● Ladbroke Grove ● Trellick Tower ● Thameside Radio ● The ClementJames Centre ● Centro Iberico ● Notting Dale ● Elgin, Ladbroke Grove ● Dimco Buildings ● Frestonia ● Barker (coachbuilder) ● Westbourne Studios ● Liberal Jewish Cemetery, Willesden ● Sarm West Studios ● Elgin Crescent ● Westfield London ● Fencing at the 1908 Summer Olympics ● St Matthew’s Church, Willesden ● Avondale Park ● Westbourne Green ● The Favourite (pub) ● Electric Cinema, Notting Hill ● Brondesbury Park ● The Mangrove ● Willesden Jewish Cemetery ● List of people buried at Willesden Jewish Cemetery ● Shepherd’s Bush Village Hall ● Passmore Edwards Public Library, Shepherd’s Bush ● Arundel Gardens ● Bush Theatre ● All Saints Notting Hill ● Ladbroke Estate ● Queen’s Park, London ● Colville Gardens ● Pinehurst Court ● Willesden New Cemetery ● St James’ Church, Norlands ● Lansdowne Crescent, London ● BPP University ● Norland Estate ● The Real World: London ● The Tabernacle, Notting Hill ● Edward Sayers (RAF airman) ● Central Gurdwara (Khalsa Jatha) London ● Notting Hill Carnival ● Shepherd’s Bush Market ● Kensington Hippodrome ● Pottery Lane ● Embassy of Cambodia, London ● Powis Square, London ● The Library at Willesden Green ● Shepherd’s Bush Pavilion ● Lime Grove Studios ● Willesden ● Windsor Castle, Maida Vale ● Shepherd’s Bush Conservation Area ● Shepherd’s Bush Green ● Paddington General Hospital ● Shepherd’s Bush Palladium ● The Ledbury ● St John’s, Notting Hill ● Morgan Studios ● Paddington Old Cemetery ● Shepherd’s Bush Empire ● St Peter’s, Notting Hill ● High Commissioner of the Gambia to the United Kingdom ● Embassy of The Gambia, London ● Royal Crescent, London ● Woodford Court ● South Kilburn ● Thematic House ● Roseford Court ● Kuo Yuan ● Bush Court ● West 12 ● Light House (London) ● Central Middlesex Hospital ● The Grampians, Shepherd’s Bush ● Shri Swaminarayan Mandir, London (Willesden) ● Notting Hill ● Wolf & Badger ● Church End, Brent ● Ladbroke Square ● Municipal Borough of Willesden ● St Mary of the Angels, Bayswater ● Westbourne, London ● Lansdowne Studios ● Embassy of Turkmenistan, London ● C Lidgate ● Embassy of Ukraine, London ● Willesden Brent Sidings ● High Commission of Cameroon, London ● St Simon’s Church, Shepherd’s Bush ● Stonebridge, London ● Statue of Saint Volodymyr, London ● St Stephen’s Church, Westbourne Park ● Holland Park Mews ● Embassy of Uzbekistan, London ● Westbourne Grove ● Duke’s Lodge ● Mercury Theatre, Notting Hill Gate ● Taylors Lane Power Station ● Owl Art Studio ● Paddington Recreation Ground ● Pharmacy (restaurants) ● Embassy of Greece, London ● Maida Vale Studios ● Freestone and Webb ● Brondesbury ● Chepstow Place ● Carlton Tavern, Kilburn ● Maida Vale ● 27 Pembridge Gardens ● St Augustine’s, Kilburn ● Leinster Square ● Aubrey House ● Merchant Square Footbridge ● 1 Merchant Square ● Paddington Basin ● The Rolling Bridge ● Barkers of Kensington ● 1 Palace Green ● Embassy of Israel, London ● St Mary Abbots ● Old Town Hall, Kensington ● Derry & Toms ● Embassy of Romania, London ● Kensington Vestry Hall ● List of ambassadors of Romania to the United Kingdom ● Our Lady of Mount Carmel and St Simon Stock ● Carmelite Priory, London ● Kensington Central Library ● London Museum ● Kensington Palace ● Metropolitan Borough of Kensington ● Kensington Town Hall, London ● Embassy of Nicaragua, London ● Nottingham Cottage ● Wren House ● Statue of Queen Victoria, Kensington Palace ● Ivy Cottage ● War Memorial Shelters ● 18 Stafford Terrace ● 13 Kensington Palace Gardens ● Embassy of Nepal, London ● List of ambassadors of Nepal to the United Kingdom ● Embassy of Jordan, London ● Rowley Gallery ● Embassy of Russia, London ● The Churchill Arms ● Campden Hill ● Embassy of Lebanon, London ● Elfin Oak ● London Cage ● Commonwealth Education Trust ● Design Museum ● Windsor Castle, Kensington ● Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Playground ● Embassy of Slovakia, London ● Embassy of the Czech Republic, London ● Bayswater ● Notting Hill Arts Club ● Opera Holland Park ● High Commission of Guyana, London ● Gate Cinema ● List of Guyanese High Commissioners to the United Kingdom ● Notting Hill Gate ● St Katherine Westway ● Kiln Theatre ● St Gabriel’s, Cricklewood ● Biddy Mulligan’s pub bombing ● Gaumont State Cinema ● Black Lion, Kilburn ● Cock Tavern Theatre ● Cricklewood Baptist Church ● Kilburn Grange Park ● Nina’s Hair Parlour ● Alfies Antique Market ● Cockpit Theatre, Marylebone ● Theatre Royal, Marylebone ● Holborn division ● Swiss Cottage ● South Hampstead ● Swiss Cottage Library ● Hampstead Conservatoire ● Embassy Theatre (London) ● Swiss Cottage Market ● Hampstead Theatre ● The Star, St John’s Wood ● NHS Gender Identity Development Service ● Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust ● Statue of Sigmund Freud, Hampstead ● Hyme House ● St John’s Wood Barracks ● Emmanuel Church, West Hampstead ● Hampstead Synagogue ● West Hampstead ● Shepherd’s Well, Frognal Way ● Fortune Green ● Stations in West Hampstead ● One Oak, Frognal ● Frognal and Fitzjohns (ward) ● Camden Arts Centre ● Klooks Kleek ● Decca Studios ● Hampstead Cemetery ● Shir Hayim ● O2 Centre ● Netherhall House ● Netherhall House ● Westbere Copse ● Freud Museum ● John Barnes (department store) ● The Advertising Archives ● Belsize Fire Station ● Anna Freud Centre ● Kilburn Priory ● Ben Uri Gallery & Museum ● Kilburn Library (Camden) ● Cricklewood ● Islamic Centre of England ● Greville Place nature reserve ● Saatchi Shul ● St John’s Wood ● Zen Centre ● Cricklewood Studios ● St Mark’s, Hamilton Terrace ● Park Royal ● Park Royal Vehicles ● Fulton Umbrellas ● Ace Cafe ● St. Raphael’s Edible Garden ● Sufra (charity) ● BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir London ● Neasden Hospital ● St Raphael’s Estate ● Olympia London ● MOVE IT ● Great British Beer Festival ● 1976 Olympia bombing ● Radiolympia ● Pure London ● Roberson Wine ● Embassy of Paraguay, London ● Blythe House ● 56 Brook Green ● Little Holland House ● The Tower House ● Woodland House ● Embassy of Georgia, London ● Brook Green ● Queen’s Head, Brook Green ● Queensway, London ● Hilton London Hyde Park ● 1–2 Orme Square ● New West End Synagogue ● Park Modern ● St Matthew’s, Bayswater ● Saint Sophia Cathedral, London ● Embassy of Laos, London ● 47 Palace Court ● Embassy of the Dominican Republic, London ● Hallfield Estate ● Lebrecht Photo Library ● Brick House (London) ● Queen’s Gardens, Westminster ● Cleveland Square ● Porchester Hall ● Westbourne Gardens ● Porchester Square ● Abbey Court Hotel ● Orsett Terrace ● Westbourne Terrace ● Kensington Gravel Pits ● Holy Trinity, Paddington ● Gate Theatre (London) ● Ranelagh Bridge Yard ● Coronet Theatre, London ● Westbourne Bridge ● Bayswater Synagogue ● Great Western Railway War Memorial ● Metropolitan Borough of Paddington ● Bishop’s Bridge ● Statue of Paddington Bear ● 84 Brook Green ● Debenham House ● Holland House ● Holland Park ● Canal Cafe Theatre ● Warwick Crescent ● Little Venice ● Warwick Castle, Maida Vale ● St Mary Magdalene, Paddington ● Warwick Avenue, London ● Paddington Green, London ● Brent sidings ● Dollis Hill ● St Andrew’s Hospital, Dollis Hill ● Paddock (war rooms) ● Dollis Hill Synagogue ● Post Office Research Station ● Dollis Hill House ● Dudding Hill line ● Gladstone Park, London ● Hamilton Terrace ● Lauderdale Mansions South ● The Warrington, Maida Vale ● Prince Alfred, Maida Vale ● Colonnade Hotel ● Maida Vale Hospital for Nervous Diseases ● Lord’s Media Centre ● Hospital of St John and St Elizabeth ● St. John’s Wood Church Grounds ● Neasden ● Neasden Junction ● Brent Park, Neasden ● The Metropolitan Theatre ● Paddington Green Police Station ● Paddington Green Children’s Hospital ● The Showroom ● Hall Place Estate ● Elstree to St. John’s Wood Cable Tunnel ● Maida Hill Tunnel ● Eyre’s Tunnel ● Aberdeen Place ● Crocker’s Folly ● Lord’s Middle Ground ● Grace Gates ● Worsley Hotel fire ● Father Time (Lord’s) ● Marylebone Up Tunnel Sidings ● Long Room ● Lord’s ● Archery at the 2012 Summer Olympics ● St John’s Wood Church ● Anglo-French Art Centre ● Wellington Hospital, London ● Cavendish Avenue ● Neasden Depot ● St Mary’s Hospital, London ● Craven Hill Gardens ● North Pole depot ● Ladbroke Grove rail crash ● Roundwood Park ● Death of Jimi Hendrix ● Kilburn, London ● Bedford Gardens, London ● Orme Square ● Lisson Grove ● RAK Studios ● Frognal ● Leighton House Museum ● West London line ● Whiteleys ● Leinster Gardens ● Elizabeth Finn Care ● Paddington Waterside ● Liberal Jewish Synagogue ● Lord’s Pavilion ● Paddington Town Hall, London ● Willesden Logistics Hub ● Statue of Diana, Princess of Wales ● New London Synagogue ● Piano Nobile ● Euston tunnel
Getting to / around Kensal Green – transport link, station & street map
Getting around in Kensal Green using public transportation may include road, street, train, underground, bus or tram transport options. Walkfo has identified the following Kensal Green places with historic / cultural / factual content when you visit:
Local Kensal Green Public Transport Stations
Kensal Green Notable Streets & Road Destinations
Paddington tube station (Bakerloo, Circle and District lines)
Acton Central railway station
Rugby Road Halt railway station
Woodstock Road railway station
Acton Main Line railway station
Rylett Road tube station
Paddenswick Road tube station
East Acton tube station
North Acton tube station
Old Oak Lane Halt railway station
Park Royal railway station
The Grove tube station
Mitre Bridge Exchange railway station
St. Quintin Park & Wormwood Scrubs railway station
Hythe Road railway station
Ladbroke Grove railway station
Kensal Green station
Kensal Green and Harlesden railway station
West London Junction (LBR) railway station
Willesden Junction station
Kensal Rise railway station
Old Oak Common Lane railway station
White City tube station
Latimer Road tube station
Ladbroke Grove tube station
Wood Lane tube station
Wood Lane tube station (Metropolitan line)
Wood Lane tube station (Central line)
White City bus station
Willesden railway station
Queen’s Park station (England)
Harlesden station
Shepherd’s Bush Market tube station
Westbourne Park tube station
Brondesbury Park railway station
Harlesden railway station (Midland Railway)
Uxbridge Road tube station
Shepherd’s Bush railway station
Shepherd’s Bush tube station
Goldhawk Road tube station
Shepherd’s Bush railway station (1869-1916)
Holland Park tube station
Willesden Green tube station
Kilburn Park tube station
Edgware Road tube station (Bakerloo line)
Dollis Hill tube station
Kilburn tube station
Swiss Cottage tube station
Swiss Cottage tube station (1868–1940)
West Hampstead Thameslink railway station
West Hampstead railway station
West Hampstead tube station
Finchley Road & Frognal railway station
Finchley Road railway station
Finchley Road railway station (Metropolitan & St John’s Wood Railway)
Finchley Road tube station
South Hampstead railway station
Kilburn High Road railway station
Cricklewood railway station
Marlborough Road tube station
St. John’s Wood tube station
Stonebridge Park station
Bayswater tube station
Queensway tube station
Notting Hill Gate tube station
Royal Oak tube station
London Paddington station
Paddington tube station (Circle and Hammersmith & City lines)
Maida Vale tube station
Dudding Hill railway station
Neasden tube station
Warwick Avenue tube station
Lord’s tube station
Old Oak Common railway station
Brondesbury railway station
Kensington (Olympia) station
Praed Street
Churchfield Road
Braybrook Street
Loftus Road
105–123 St Mark’s Road
Golborne Road
Portland Road, Notting Hill
Portobello Road
Ledbury Road
Goldhawk Road
Holland Road, London
Addison Road, London
Holland Street, Kensington
Kensington High Street
Kensington Church Street
Essex Street Chapel
Church Street (ward)
Avenue Road, London
Allitsen Road drill hall
Alexandra Road Estate
2b Melbury Road
8 Melbury Road
Bayswater Road
Ossington Street
Masbro Road
Westbourne Terrace Road
Marylebone Road
Abbey Road Studios
Lauderdale Road Spanish & Portuguese Synagogue
Abbey Road, London
Cuba Street, Wellington
Grove Road Power Station
St John’s Wood Road Baptist Church
Hornton Street
Campden Hill Road
Claremont Road Ground
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Local Kensal Green historians & Kensal Green tour guides
Trying to encourage visitors to Kensal Green? Walkfo has millions audio places already available but Walkfo Creator gives Kensal Green’s places, attractions & landmarks ability to create their own unique outdoor audio museums & using our simple & easy to use Walkfo Creator. – Creating a new audio experience for your Kensal Green place is free* and quick (15+ minutes if you prepare text content) to use, with Walkfo Creator doing the hard work of generating AI audio files for geo-spots from the text you provide with a simply click on a map. – The 100 Amazing Kensal Green Places is just one example of an outdoor museum created using Walkfo Creator (pictured to the left) for people to safely explore during Covid-19 times whilst visiting a city. Our tool is open to tourism organisations, travel destinations & National Trust locations to create their own audio walks to offer free when people visit Kensal Green destinations. – Walkfo itself is looking to partner with websites offering things-to-do / what’s on events listings to enhance the content of our ‘visit-Kensal Green’ web pages (for example: www.visitKensal Green.com). If you are interested in partnering, please contact us to discuss options.
* Walkfo Creator is free to use for a limited number of audio spots within a map with a license fee applicable when more than 20 audio spots within location walk are created. v1.1336