








Music and Travel























One Tree Hill View Point at the Greenwich Park



Prime Meridian, Royal Observatory and Peter Harrison Planetarium




Greenwich Park







National Maritime Museum

Old Royal Naval College


Early cherry blossom at the Kensington Gardens



Royal Albert Hall

Beautiful magnolias


The Albert Memorial


Kensington Palace

Round Pond at Kensington Gardens





Italian Gardens





Peter Pan Statue

Tropical green parakeets can be found in London


Cozy streets of London





Hampstead Heath












Kenwood House




The Brew House





The Dairy at Kenwood


Gwendwr Gardens



Sunset at the Prospekt Hill


The O2 arena

Canary Wharf district on the Isle of Dogs


Holland Park.




Japanese Garden.












The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew was founded in 1759 and keep changing since then. It houses the largest and the most diverse botanical and mycological collections in the world.
Palm House

The Dutch House is one of the few surviving parts of the Kew Palace complex.






Temperate House.



Ruined Arch.



Japanese Gateway.



Beauty of nature.









Rock Garden.




Marianne North Gallery and The Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art.


Chihuly exhibition: Reflections on Nature. The world’s most celebrated contemporary glass artist brought his work to the stunning backdrop of the Kew Gardens.






Chiswick House and Gardens is among the most glorious examples of 18th-century British architecture.










Ionic Temple.

Classic Bridge.



Regent’s Park.













Legendary Abbey Road Studios

Camden Town.





Magnificent Royal Albert Hall.

















The Royal Albert Hall is one of the world’s most iconic venues with the unique history and incredible architecture. It was opened by Queen Victoria in 1871 and since then all the greatest artists and performers have appeared on its stage. It was the first time I attended the concert at RAH and it was very memorable experience, auditorium is simply breathtaking and the sound is so clear.

