Check out this week's alternative guide to what's on in London.
| Saturday, 23rd July | Climb inside the Spitfire MK16 and take the pilot’s seat, learn about the aircraft and see what it would have been like to fly a Spitfire. | Twickenham Model Railway Club's annual open day will showcase the two extremes of this fascinating hobby. | A tour exploring decades of architectural innovation and see Southbank Centre from a whole new perspective. | Watch -- from the sidelines -- as a parade of vintage buses are taken around central London. |
| Sunday, 24th July | A rare opportunity to descend into the historic ice wells beneath the floor of the London Canal Museum. | A street long festival, now in its 3rd year, to show off local trades and services. | Closed to the public since 1833, the unveiling of Woodberry Wetlands is hugely anticipated event. |
| Monday, 25th July | Author Andrew Robinson introduces the Indus civilisation that flourished for half a millennium from about 2600 to 1900 BC | In this lecture, Sir Malcolm will give a lively account of his years in government and opposition, detailing his involvement in some of recent history’s most important events. |
| Tuesday, 26th July | This talk will provide an illuminating journey of the hereafter as imagined in literature, philosophy and religion throughout the centuries. |
| Wednesday, 27th July | An open day in Guildhall Yard with police horses and dogs and officers in uniforms from the past 175 years. | Test out the latest virtual reality headsets, compose your own Chiptune soundtrack and take part in a gaming inspired dance battle. | A chance to be a forensics scientist studying the cause of the Fire of London. |
| Thursday, 28th July | A choice of interactive debates and workshops, as well as enjoy a bar, music and the Museum’s new Designology exhibition. |
| Friday, 29th July | In this special event, Dora Thornton, British Museum, and Professor James S Shapiro, Columbia University, discuss how Shakespeare’s extraordinary plays responded to these tumultuous events. | A guide to bat watching, followed by a walk through the nature reserve looking for them. |
| Saturday, 30th July | Visit the c.1397 Grade 2 listed ‘threshing’ barn, over 100ft x 40ft in size, with a fine crownpost roof. | A series of scything workshops, talks and communal picnics culminating in a scything competition. | Good Chance presents a discussion on the role of technology in the refugee crisis. |
| Exhibitions closing shortly | To celebrate 30 years of Poems on the Underground, this new poster parade looks back at a selection of poems from the programme (Ends on Fri, 29th Jul) | Two revolving arms narrowly evade each other in a huge mobile of light and sound in constant motion. (Ends on Wed, 10th Aug) | This exhibition charts the huge regeneration and development of Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park from 2012 – 2016 (Ends on Thu, 28th Jul) | Revealing portraits from an era when ordinary people at work on the canals were seldom photographed. (Ends on Sun, 7th Aug) | Discover a miniature model favela in the Horniman Gardens, created by Project Morrinho. (Ends on Thu, 4th Aug) | A small display that encapsulates the personal processes of being a Punk in the late 1970s. (Ends on Thu, 28th Jul) | A major exhibition revealing the fascinating life, times and lost library of Queen Elizabeth I’s most famous ‘conjurer’. (Ends on Fri, 29th Jul) | The exhibition brings together 73 art jewellery pieces created between the 1960s and the present day. (Ends on Fri, 22nd Jul) | An exhibition of models of babies that are just a little bit creepy. (Ends on Sat, 30th Jul) | A display of art work inspired by the zoological exhibits at the Grant Museum (Ends on Sat, 6th Aug) |
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