London/Mayfair

Mayfair is an extremely well-heeled district of west central London, as symbolised by its appearance as the most expensive property on the London Monopoly board, closely followed by one of its main throughfares, Park Lane. Part of the City of Westminster, Mayfair is roughly bordered by Park Lane and Hyde Park to the west, Oxford Street to the north, Green Park and Piccadilly to the south and Regent Street to the east. The district includes several major shopping streets, including Bond Street.

Understand

Mayfair is named after the fortnight-long May Fair that took place there from 1686 until it was banned from that location in 1764. (Before 1686, the May Fair was held in the Haymarket; after 1764, it moved to Fair Field in Bow). The area was owned by the Grosvenor family and much of the land is still part of the Grosvenor estate, having been originally developed for residences from the late seventeenth century.

Get in

By Tube

Tube stations are to be found at all four corners of Mayfair, making the district extremely easy to access, with all sites of interest a maximum of 10-15 minutes walk from any station (anti-clockwise from the south-west corner):

A couple of other Tube stations allow access into Mayfair from the north and south of the district, respectively:

See

Landmarks

Museums and Galleries

Do

Cinema

Eat

Moderate

Sleep

Splurge

External links

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 and the following WikiTravel users: Pjamescowie. The original version of this article can be seen at http://wikitravel.org/en/London/Mayfair.