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Go alternative
23-27 Wadeson Street, Bethnal Green, E2 9DR
Life’s never dull at this popular Hackney cabaret/restaurant, whether you’re looking to appreciate the transvestite talents of Jonny Woo, or indulge in a little gay cinema in the occasional Cinematheque. Read more
Green Dragon Lane, Brentford, TW8 0EN
In 2009 the Kew Bridge Steam Museum hit the headlines because thieves stripped £20,000 worth of lead from its roof. That’s just another good reason to go and support this little gem of a museum, where you can see old water-pumping rotative engines, and on selected days ride on a real steam locomotive. Read more
Columbia Road, E2 7RG
Get on an eighteenth-century tip and kick off your East End Sunday by slurping rock oysters from the stall just round the corner from Jones’ Dairy. Additional Tabasco sauce is highly recommended. Pop into Ezra Courtyard afterwards, where you can browse for everything from fascinating bric-a-brac to interesting artisanal cheeses. Read more
Hyde Park, London, W1C 1LX
Join a tradition that includes Karl Marx, Vladimir Lenin and George Orwell, and go and harangue the public at Speakers’ Corner. If you’re lucky, you might even have your contribution broadcast on Resonance FM. Read more
Harrow Rd, London, W10 4RA
During the Victorian era, this cemetery was one of the most fashionable places to be buried in England. Wilkie Collins, William Makepeace Thackeray, the creator of Pears’ Soap and a cross-dressing army doctor are among the many celebrated corpses to whom you can pay homage in this fantastic brooding landscape at the top of Ladbroke Grove. There’s a whole range of tours on offer from March to October including ‘The Friends of Charles Dickens’ and ‘Explorers and Adventurers’. Read more
Isle Of Dogs, E14
Strange though it might sound, the great cathedral of a tube station that Foster designed at Canary Wharf deserves to be as celebrated as the towers it serves. Filled with suits Mon-Fri, on Sundays the area surrounding it becomes an intriguing destination, with its faintly melancholic waterside walks, plentiful pubs and an uncrowded but vibrant shopping centre beneath 1 Canada Square. Never thought you’d get excited about a sushi bar in a Waitrose? Neither did we. Try this one. Read more
18 Stafford Terrace, London, W8 7BH
Edward Linley Sambourne was a Punch cartoonist who here with his wife and two children from 1875. The house has become a time capsule from that era since the decor and furnishing have remained virtually unchanged. A huge paper archive also provides a plethora of details on their daily existence. Read more
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14 comments
Taking the kids out is not fun when you have to navigate crowds, stand in queues, do the same as everybody else, buy expensive sugary drinks and snacks, stand around while your children do 'an activity', and fight for space in this overcrowded city. Could you do a 'where is there space?' feature? I am serious. Recommendations for 'families' are generally ridiculous. By the way, my children are not particularly young and they are well behaved. It's me who can't stand all of the above.
And no mention of me, Time Out I am disappointed! I do think the EastEnd is the place to be on a Sunday, what with the markets, hullabaloo, and disco roasts ( ahem ahem ) and of course my very own EastEnd Cabaret every Sunday at Carnivale, Brick Lane! Free cabaret for the masses.
So I am very bias but there are some great secret bars and places to see, like Indo on Whitechapel High Street, never the hustle and bustle of Brick Lane on a Sunday but with all the charm and atmosphere! Or try out the new East Boats, where you can hire a canoe or London's only Punting boats from just next to Mile End station for £18 an hour.
See you around the EastEnd on a Sunday
Some great suggestions here. If you'd like to find great ideas for things to do that also do some good we've written a blog post about it here: http://www.leapanywhere.com/blog/130-charity-events-in- london-this-week-fun-things-to-do-good-and-easy-fundrai sing-ideas
Great article, so 2 of the first pages listings are completly inaccurate.. Nice work time! Think they just re ran this article last seen in 1984 edition
Loved the disco roast recommendation, but after taking the trip across town with a group of mates yesterday we got to The East Village and were told that they no longer does Sunday Roasts!!!!
Can't help feeling bad for the Time Out team when I read this - but I have to confess this article talked me out of a hard copy subscription on back to an online user.
Trouble is there are so many sites that people are using to tell me about their ideas on good things to do in London that Time Out really needs to use the advantage it has as an established name to ensure it stays the most useful. I really hope it does.
I have a (first) date on Sunday in London - anyone got any ideas!?
Oh! Time Out! What's occurring? I can accept that judgements on what counts as cultural etc. - roast dinner? Disco music?? are subjective, but why are you recommending a market that is not open on a Sunday (ie Broadway market) as a good thing to do on a Sunday? And I know you've got a link on the website, but there's no mention in the print edition that while you're popping to get your alternative oysters at Columbia Road, you may happen across a teeny tiny flower market. I am a big fan of TO normally, but this is really laaazy journalism. Sorry.
PS my favorite Sunday haunt is Church Street in Stoke Newington - Turkish coffee, fresh juices, mediterranean breakfasts and vintage clothes. Also an old school DVD rental shop with the discs arranged by director, not 'category', for that afternoon veg out.
Nice to see that TFL are finally doing the free bike hire scheme, but you have to wonder how long those bikes will last on the streets in a city where one is stolen approx every 4 seconds....
This might have to be crossed off the Sunday to do list fairly rapidly.
Must say I agree with Laura too. I found the Hangover Cure one particularly poor. Have the writers ever had a raging hangover or are they chained to their desks? Because every Londoner knows that Camden's hordes of tourists and pounding music are the worst place you could be on a Sunday morning....
I have to say I totally agree with Laura. Having said that.. it does pose another problem. I have many "hidden" gems I like to visit in London, from parties to shows, breakfast to midnight snacks...Timeout has picked up on these on occasion and within weeks if not days they kill any atmosphere there was in said destination and make it impossible to get a seat without booking weeks in advance..
The reviews for the past 8 - 12 months have constantly failed to deliver or find anything that you couldnt find by having a quick google! Part of me is happy, but I still feel TO could be highlighting some great things to do and help London business thats being hit hard of late, just keep your prying eyes out of my hidden spots!
try unsigned sundays @ bloomsbury bowling lanes. live acoustic music, cheap bowling, half price karaoke, films in the cinema and discount on food. come down and chill out on a sunday!
I DID like everything Time Out wrote here. Especially the Go Alternative part.
Keep up Time Out! You make me get out of bed every day and go explore London!
I really appreciate Time Out as a publication but invariably as a consumer of Time Out I care about, and am interested in, what is going on in London. It's for this reason that everytime I read a Time Out feature i get excited that it is going to throw up a hidden gem or suggest something to do that i haven't heard about or thought of doing before in the capital. But alas, the above feature 'Great Things to do on a Sunday in London' fails to deliver as so many have lately. Regular readers of Time Out already know a lot of what is going on in the Capital, what we are looking for are new inspiring ideas not 'go to camden market to cure a hangover' we've been doing that for years - since we were kids (and quite frankly there is no where worse on a hangover). Don't forget to cater for Londoners - not just tourists. PLEASE show me something new.
For Vintage lovers and retrophiles.. HULA BOOGIE! Floor stomping vintage music of 1930s to 1950s from DJs, retro cocktails, brulesque entertainment and dancing (and occasional bands) since 2003 at South London Pacific Tiki Bar, Kennington. Third Sunday of every month. Voted Best Club Night by easyJet. www.hulaboogie.co.uk