Liverpool

Liverpool => is a city in Merseyside, England, famed for its music, sport and nightlife.

Understand

Liverpool is a city with a great cultural heritage and was recently awarded the title of . Liverpool is home to the and is also renowned for being the birthplace of a wide range of popular musicians including , and, more recently, . The city posseses the largest national museum collection outside of London and has a fascinating and turbulent history as a great world maritime centre. Given this, Liverpool is also home to Europe's oldest Chinatown.

Get in

By plane

Liverpool is served by Liverpool John Lennon airport. Around one hundred flights arrive daily from within the U.K. as well as mainland Europe. The airport is particularly well-served by low-cost airlines including and . For a complete listing of airlines and destinations, see the Summer and Winter timetables.

Liverpool John Lennon Airport is located in the suburb of Speke around eight miles to the south of the city centre. Immediately outside the arrivals area you will find a taxi rank and bus stops. Taxis to the city centre cost around £8 (Approx. €12, US$14) for the 20-minute journey.

Several bus routes go directly to the city centre from the airport:

Although Liverpool John Lennon Airport is more convenient for Liverpool, nearby Manchester Airport serves a wider variety of destinations and is just a short train journey away from Liverpool. See the next section.

By train

Liverpool is served by Liverpool Lime Street station which is located in the heart of the city centre. Trains arrive frequently from all parts of the U.K.

Liverpool is only about two-and-a-half hours from London by train - there's a train about every hour - and it's not so expensive to get there. You can get a saver ticket for £52.10 on the day of travel or for as little as £22 if you book a couple of weeks in advance.

There is a direct train from Manchester Airport to Liverpool every hour at peak times (around 06:30-19:30). In addition, it is possible to reach Liverpool by changing at Manchester Piccadilly or Manchester Oxford Road.

By bus

Get around

Liverpool City Centre is small enough to walk around, but black cabs are plentiful if you are feeling lazy. Buses run out from the centre regularly, and there are local trains to get you to the outskirts. If you want to get around quite a bit using public transport, see if a Saveaway ticket will save you money. Available from stations, post offices and travel information centres they are available for different zones and are valid for a day's travel on bus, train and ferry (for the ferry you need to have zone E).

See

A great thing about Liverpool is the architecture - for so long it was neglected and run down, but these days most of the city centre is quite splendid.

Do

Learn

Liverpool is home to three Universities:

Buy

Although the main shopping street in Liverpool is dominated by the same chain stores you'll find in any other large U.K. city, Liverpool has many distinctive shops of its own including:

Eat

City Centre

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Lark Lane

Lark Lane, around 2.5 miles to the south of the city centre is one of the better places to eat out. The road, which connects Aigburth Road with Sefton Park, is home to many unique restaurants, cafés and other shops. Among the better ones are:

Drink

For a good night out

There's a good selection of pubs, clubs and bars to suit a variety of music and atmospheric tastes. Friday and saturday nights are the busiest nights, although many bars are busy with students throughout the week! Mathew Street and Concert Square with nearby Wood St are the main two nocturnal focal points. There is a good mix with the locals and rather large student population. Most of the local ladies, as in most northern towns and cities dress rather scantily - despite the elements. On the whole it is better to dress smart for the majority of bars and clubs, especially those with customer selectors on the door. Notable exceptions are places like Le Bateau, the Krazy house, the Caledonian and other places of a similar alternative ilk. Like any major UK city , it is pretty safe out at night, although you will probably see an occasional 'dispute' over a young 'lady' and will most definitely be approached by beggars, especially adjacent to cash machines and fast food outlets. The local police have had a heavy presence on a saturday and friday night over the last few years to combat this and are largely succeeding. It is pretty busy getting out of the city centre at the end of a weekend night (especially at the start of university term time - September/October) but there are plenty of black hackney cabs which congregate at various txi ranks. The Merseyrail system works until about midnight, whilst there are a series of dedicated night buses which run from the main bus stations, usually for a flat fare. All modes of transport tend to become very busy from around midnight.

Real or Cask Ale

Cask conditioned ale is the traditional form of beer in the UK and is (with some modern microbewery exceptions) unique internationally. In the 1970's, the larger brewers switiched from cask ale to keg beer. Keg beer is essentially 'dead' beer with added CO2 and NO2 and is more economical as it lasts for years, rather than weeks in the case of cask. Unfortunately it tastes rubbish. Thankfully, recent years have seen a revival in tradtional cask ale, and the European Capital of Culture has been in the vanguard of its urban renaissance. So to help you sample some traditonal british beer when in Liverpool, check the list below of a vast array of pubs, ranging from the traditional to the modern . For more information about cask ale, see .

The best

The Rest

Sleep

There are a number of hotels in the city, ranging from budget guesthouses and lodges to 5 star international properties.

Stay safe

Liverpool has long been the butt of jokes about having high levels of crime, but the reality is that crime rates in Liverpool are low compared with most other large cities in the UK. You are no more likely to be a victim here than most other European cities. However, as in other cities, you should observe a few simple precautions. Don't leave valuables on display in an unattended car, for example. Try to stay aware of your surroundings, and be discreet with cash, expensive camera equipment and so on.

Scousers are gregarious people, but there are still those who seek to take advantage. Beware especially of people who approach you in the street with stories of having lost their train fare home. These are typically just begging techniques. Be especially careful if you wander off the beaten track and find yourself in some of the more deprived outlying districts. Stay on the beaten track of a night time, stick to the many themed pub/bars and avoid some of the larger R&B and Dance clubs (these are more suited to streetwise locals or people who understand liverpool culture well). Be prepared to wait for a taxi of a night time but don't be tempted to walk back to your hotel unless you are central. Although Liverpool is a wonderfully friendly place, as with most major cities a slightly sinister side appears after hours.

A friendly manner and a polite smile go a long way in this city, but a sensible approach to travelling is, as always, advisable.

Get out

Birkenhead, across the Mersey, has a football club called Tranmere Rovers. Although this club has always lived in the shadow of Everton and Liverpool, it has a long tradition and a great family atmosphere - well worth a visit.

Chester is about 40 minutes away by Merseyrail. Chester is a beautiful historical city on the River Dee famous for its city walls.

Port Sunlight on the Wirral is about 20 minutes away by train. It was built as a model village by Lord Lever and contains the Lady Lever Art Gallery, a marvellously eclectic collection of objects, similar to the Burrell Collection in Glasgow.

West Kirby on the Wirral boasts a superb beach, only thirty minutes away by train. Trains depart every 15 minutes (peak time, 30 minutes other times) on the Wirral line from all four downtown Liverpool stations.

This text of this article is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 1.0. It has been slightly modified to fit the general design of this website. The authors of this document are Anonymous user(s) of Wikitravel, Christos Papadopoulos, David Le Brun, Evan Prodromou, Nathan Charlton, Paul Woodman, Rob Payne, Wikitravel user James, Wikitravel user Thebrid, Pete B and the following WikiTravel users: Cheers, Chris_j_wood, Cjensen, Jonboy, Maj, Nzpcmad, Pjamescowie. The original version of this article can be seen at http://wikitravel.org/en/Liverpool.