A Hidden Street in London's West End

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  • Опубликовано: 4 июл 2024
  • A stroll down Lower Robert Street.
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Комментарии • 506

  • @JayForeman
    @JayForeman 23 дня назад +340

    I worked for ten years as a tour guide, driving sight-seers around London in a fleet of classic Mini Coopers. The basic idea was to recreate The Italian Job, by sneaking down back alleys and doing cheeky manoeuvres. Zipping down Lower Robert Street, giving my passengers an unexpected white knuckle ride under a building, was PERFECT for this, and was always my favourite part of the tour!

    • @MrManningata
      @MrManningata 22 дня назад +26

      I would pay a huge sum of money for a white knuckle Mini ride with you, as long as you also brought your guitar.

    • @sirloinestakegames7866
      @sirloinestakegames7866 22 дня назад +3

      You never fail to surprise me, Mr Foreman!

    • @althejazzman
      @althejazzman 22 дня назад +6

      It's the map men man! No surprise that Jay pretty much learnt "the knowledge".

    • @DanielHarveyDyer
      @DanielHarveyDyer 21 день назад +1

      @@MrManningata Can you even fit a guitar in a mini with two adults?

    • @MrManningata
      @MrManningata 21 день назад

      @@DanielHarveyDyer ruclips.net/video/PeCrnbJHJeY/видео.html
      Not a mini but an equally small car.

  • @paintedpilgrim
    @paintedpilgrim 25 дней назад +217

    Many many moons ago as a homeless teen I slept in Lower Robert Street whilst waiting to be helped by "The Connection" and Centrepoint. It was relatively dry, and relatively protected and "warm" thanks to the vents from buildings as that year London had snow....

    • @FriendlyNamelessGuy
      @FriendlyNamelessGuy 24 дня назад +7

      But did you see a ghost?

    • @paintedpilgrim
      @paintedpilgrim 24 дня назад +17

      @@FriendlyNamelessGuy no, but there were plenty of noises I wasnt sure where they came from, it was very echo-y at times....

    • @josagh19
      @josagh19 24 дня назад +21

      Interesting insight.... I wonder whether the night time closure is due to their 'fear' of homeless people seeking shelter there or the protective, paranoid nature of the businesses with service access in the street (or a combination of both). Either way a night time closure specifically for Lower Robert St contradicts the concept of a public road. Lots of tents under the covered part of Adelphi Terrace above it and it's jarring to see so many people surviving under the shadow of some of the wealthiest land in the world.. The constant contradiction of wealth and poverty isn't unique to London but it's an issue which has become far more visible in recent years. I've heard that those vents are life savers. A sorry situation for one of the wealthiest cities in one of the wealthiest countries in the world. I wish you well!

    • @oldschool1993
      @oldschool1993 23 дня назад

      @@josagh19 Those would be British people, the illegals who just waded ashore are comfy and cozy in 4 star hotels paid by taxpayers.

    • @bd1845
      @bd1845 23 дня назад +3

      Are you ok now and ‘off the streets’?

  • @stephenwilshaw3052
    @stephenwilshaw3052 25 дней назад +151

    Affectionally known by Cabbies as "The Bat Cave"

  • @ericprice3225
    @ericprice3225 25 дней назад +94

    I work in The Adelphi and going through Lower Robert Street after a fire evacuation drill saves me having to wait half an hour to get a lift from the main lobby. Also, The Adelphi is the London HQ for Spotify, Condé Nast, The Economist and other well known companies.

  • @BibTheBoulderTheOriginalOne
    @BibTheBoulderTheOriginalOne 25 дней назад +136

    One of my favourite ways to spend a day off is to 'lose myself' in London. I never cease to be amazed at the hidden gems that can be found just by strolling around off the beaten track. So many little passages to explore....

    • @MrSloika
      @MrSloika 25 дней назад +13

      That's the best thing to do just about anywhere...within reason...when traveling. Wander off to the places the tourists never see. which almost always turn out to be more interesting than the tourist traps.

    • @luqmaanabrahams1971
      @luqmaanabrahams1971 25 дней назад +5

      One day you might find Diagon Alley

    • @BibTheBoulderTheOriginalOne
      @BibTheBoulderTheOriginalOne 24 дня назад +1

      @@kjh23gk Well said.

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 18 дней назад +15

    This is similar to Chicago! Chicago has some double-decked and a few triple-decked streets downtown immediately north and south of the Main Branch and immediately east of the South Branch of the Chicago River. The multilevel configuration in Chicago arose from geography and traffic patterns in the Loop. The Loop is a neighborhood named after the elevated tracks above it for Chicago's L system, and the tracks were built by you guessed it...Charles Tyson Yerkes. In most other parts of the rest of the city near the Chicago River, only major streets crossed the river. However, most downtown streets crossed the river, and all of these crossings were bascule bridges, which required height clearances at the approaches to and over the river. Clearances were further necessitated due to the presence of many existing railroad tracks along the river (as in the west bank of the south branch) and tracks that ended at the river (like tracks ending at Randolph Street). Thus, a clearance zone was created along the river at locations that contained many closely spaced crossings. Many double-decked or triple-decked streets were created because they fell within this clearance zone. This also created an anomaly not only in the layout and uses of streets, but also planning of buildings.
    Generally, the upper levels of the multi-level streets usually serve local traffic. The primary entrances of buildings are usually located on this level. The lower levels generally serve through-traffic and trucks serving businesses along the roads. This level houses the receiving/shipping entrances to the buildings on these streets. As a result, loading docks at street level are noticeably absent. There's also the McCormick Place Busway which opened in 2002 and runs for 4 km from Lower Randolph between Michigan and Columbus in downtown to the center. It uses the lower levels of the multilevel streets near downtown, and surfaces to follow the Metra Electric District right-of-way to outside the South Building of McCormick Place. It is meant to provide a true and unencumbered expressway for visitors to move between downtown hotels and the convention center, but is also used by buses for Soldier Field events, public safety workers, Metra, convention contractors, and Art Institute deliveries, along with providing a secure route for national and international government officials to utilize between the two points. Chicago also has the Chicago Pedway, a network of pedestrian tunnels, ground-level concourses and bridges connecting skyscrapers, retail stores, hotels, and train stations throughout the central business district

  • @paulgilbert9346
    @paulgilbert9346 25 дней назад +23

    Many years ago there was a bicycle shop on Lower Roberts Street which is how I first found it. Also used it many times as a motorist to cut from Embankment to Strand as it was much quicker than going via Trafalgar Square.

    • @Ivanskavinsky
      @Ivanskavinsky 22 дня назад +2

      The bike shop was Bike UK, my first job! 😁
      Spent a year in that tunnel😱, we were always busy though and had access to the brilliant cafes and sandwich bars by the station.
      One of my older, not wiser, colleagues used to test the brakes on newly built up bikes by sprinting from the river end straight at the brick wall… They,mostly, worked😂

    • @DavidKnowles0
      @DavidKnowles0 22 дня назад +1

      @@Ivanskavinsky You had to be tempted to ensure they didn't work at least once!

    • @Ivanskavinsky
      @Ivanskavinsky 21 день назад +1

      @@DavidKnowles0 😁 Sorely tempted, but the results would have been catastrophic😱
      In the end I didn’t have to, he ran out of talent (and luck) on his own! 🚑😬🦷🤣

  • @baystated
    @baystated 25 дней назад +14

    When a video starts with "my favorite cheese shop" you know it is going to be a gem.

    • @YannaTarassi
      @YannaTarassi 15 дней назад +1

      And ends with "a nice wine bar" :)

  • @andycooke6231
    @andycooke6231 25 дней назад +44

    Did you know Bob Dylan filmed 'Subterranean Homesick Blues' in which he has the lyrics on a series of large cards was filmed further along the embankment in an scruffy alley at the side of the Savoy hotel.

    • @damianharris2167
      @damianharris2167 24 дня назад +6

      It’s called Savoy Steps and is near the rear of the Savoy Hotel.
      Turn around and you’ll be facing the rear of a building called Savoy Place which is home to the Institute of Electrical Engineers.
      They moved there in 1909 and the architect in charge of the alterations that took place was one Charles Holden. Can’t think where I’ve come across his name before 🤔
      The fledgling BBC rented space there when they first formed and before moving to nearby Bush House.

    • @davidfalconer8913
      @davidfalconer8913 24 дня назад +3

      The pump don't work , 'cos the vandal stole the handle 😝..... ( ? ) ...... DAVE™🛑

  • @pw601
    @pw601 25 дней назад +8

    Many years ago Seven Dials had a bit of a reputation, but not for cheese shops.

  • @francisboyle1739
    @francisboyle1739 25 дней назад +27

    Speaking for myself, I love a bit of Eighteen Century vaulting!

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 18 дней назад +10

    "buying cheese at my favourite cheese shop" Cheese is love, cheese is life! Here are some cheese facts: The word cheese comes from Latin caseus (where the Spanish queso, Portuguese queijo, and Romanian caș come from) from which the modern word casein is also derived. When the Romans began to make hard cheeses for their legionaries' supplies, a new word started to be used: formaticum, from caseus formatus, or "molded cheese" (as in "formed"). It is from this word that the French fromage, standard Italian formaggio, Catalan formatge, Breton fourmaj, and Occitan fromatge (or formatge) are derived. The earliest evidence of cheesemaking in the archaeological record dates back to 5500 BCE and is found in what is now Kuyavia, Poland, where strainers coated with milk-fat molecules have been found. The earliest evidence of cheesemaking in the Mediterranean dates back to 5200 BCE, on the coast of the Dalmatia region of Croatia. The earliest proposed dates for the origin of cheesemaking range from around 8000 BCE, when sheep were first domesticated. Because animal skins and inflated internal organs have provided storage vessels for a range of foodstuffs since ancient times, it is probable that the process of cheese making was discovered accidentally by storing milk in a container made from the stomach of an animal, resulting in the milk being turned to curd and whey by the rennet from the stomach
    In 2021, world production of cheese from whole cow milk was 22.2 million tonnes, with the United States accounting for 28% of the total, followed by Germany, France, Italy and the Netherlands as secondary producers. In the US, Wisconsin has a long tradition and history of cheese production. Wisconsin's cheesemaking tradition dates back to the 19th century. European immigrants who settled in Wisconsin were drawn to its fertile fields. Soon, dairy farms sprang up around Wisconsin, and farmers began producing cheese to preserve excess milk. In 1841, Anne Pickett established Wisconsin's first commercial cheese factory, using milk from neighbors' cows. A century later, Wisconsin was home to more than 1,500 cheese factories, which produced more than 500 million pounds of cheese per year. In 2010, Wisconsin's cheese production rose to 2.6 billion pounds (requiring the state cheese industry to import a substantial amount of milk from other states to meet production needs). In 2014, Wisconsin produced 2.9 billion pounds of cheese, accounting for 25.4% of all cheese produced in the US

  • @alanmoss3603
    @alanmoss3603 25 дней назад +68

    "Oi! You! Hazzard! Diocletian here! You pronounced my name wrong! Git it sorr-tid or you'll git a slap! Geeeeez-a!" (Ed: it is a little known fact that Diocletian was actually born within the sound of Bow Bells - and REALLY hated the hoi polloi getting his name wrong)!

    • @caw25sha
      @caw25sha 25 дней назад +12

      According to Wikipedia he was a Dalmatian. Supply your own jokes.

    • @pauljmccluskey5532
      @pauljmccluskey5532 25 дней назад

      😝

    • @pauljmccluskey5532
      @pauljmccluskey5532 25 дней назад +10

      @@caw25shaYou can easily spot a Dalmatian from a short distance lol 😝

    • @daddymuggle
      @daddymuggle 25 дней назад

      Yes, well spotted indeed

    • @stevep3800
      @stevep3800 25 дней назад +4

      ​@@caw25sha Well spotted

  • @stephenpegum9776
    @stephenpegum9776 25 дней назад +64

    That "decent wine bar" you mentioned at the end is actually called Gordon's and as a group of friends we've being going there on the 1st Wednesday of each month since about 1977, at least until the Covid lock-downs happened.
    We had a tradition that as couples started their families they'd bring along their new baby to the 1st Gordon's after their birth. Great fun ! 😎

    • @O-sa-car
      @O-sa-car 25 дней назад +1

      how was the get-together two days ago?

    • @paultidd9332
      @paultidd9332 25 дней назад

      I’m not sure it’s Gordon’s!

    • @stephenpegum9776
      @stephenpegum9776 25 дней назад +4

      @@paultidd9332 Sorry but it definitely is - I've been there over 100 times !

    • @paultidd9332
      @paultidd9332 25 дней назад

      @@stephenpegum9776 I thought the clue was in the last shot and my comment below…

    • @davidjames579
      @davidjames579 25 дней назад +3

      I'd be tempted to order a Gin and wait for them to ask what make.

  • @stephenandrews8419
    @stephenandrews8419 25 дней назад +12

    I used to deliver letters there when i was a postman in the 1980s. I seem to remember an old fella who appeared to reside / work in a caged entrance in the wall??? I think his name was 'Old Bob'? I know sometimes when it rained heavily i would stand and chat to him as we watched the water flow past like a stream

  • @kalui96
    @kalui96 25 дней назад +33

    I am here by the blessing of the RUclips algorithm. I subscribed purely because your narration is top notch. I look forward to hearing more stories from you. With love, from Western USA

    • @amandeepv
      @amandeepv 22 дня назад

      I live in London and walk around London after work no other city can claim suvh history

  • @18robsmith
    @18robsmith 25 дней назад +24

    The life that Jago leads - cheese and wine.....

    • @davidjames579
      @davidjames579 25 дней назад +3

      Every journey should start with cheese and end with wine.

  • @walker1054
    @walker1054 25 дней назад +31

    I've drove down here a couple of times with a couple of people when parked on those streets(for work dont worry) because it always makes them think wtf when you enter and I feel James Bondy lol

    • @tonywise198
      @tonywise198 25 дней назад +2

      Yep! Done that often with visitors myself. Hilarious reactions ensue!

    • @davidjames579
      @davidjames579 25 дней назад +1

      It actually looks like the tunnels from Spectre near the end or the MI6 subterranean tunnels in Skyfall.

  • @Alex-cw3rz
    @Alex-cw3rz 25 дней назад +396

    Just for any American watching everyone in Southern England has their favourite cheese shop and Friday is known as cheese day, where you go to the most delightful local vender of coagulated milk, to sample their finest selection of cheeses on tiny slices of Welsh rarebit, while listening to The Planets by Holst.
    A typical conversation in a Southern cheese shop may go:
    Jolly Chap: Good vender of cheese how has the milking been this fine morning.
    Youth: oh Aye, Sir, been 'right good recently I wager
    Jolly Chap: this cheese is magnificent, here is a penny for your trouble young fellow
    Youth: oh thank you sir, me' ma' and 14 siblings, will be able to afford to eat tonight, I'll buy them a slap up microwave dinner from Tesco

    • @1234j
      @1234j 25 дней назад +59

      Thank you for spreading the word about this noble tradition. Am about to stab the non-recyclable lid on the heritage ready meal before settling down in front of a roaring microwave, to google heritage cheese pictures while waiting to serve up a fitting repast to all my rickety urchin siblings here in Blighty. Living the dream!

    • @andrewhotston983
      @andrewhotston983 25 дней назад +23

      The whole cheese shop thing is a throwback to Monty Python, of course.

    • @JM-bg1it
      @JM-bg1it 25 дней назад +25

      Yes, in England one oft must curtail one's Walpoling activities, sally forth, and infiltrated ya place of purveyance to negotiate the vending of some cheesy comestibles!

    • @brianartillery
      @brianartillery 25 дней назад +12

      ​@@JM-bg1it - Ensuring, of course, that the copy of 'Rogue Herries' you were reading before you came over all esurient, was replaced in it's correct place on the shelf in the Thurmond Street Library.

    • @andrewemery4272
      @andrewemery4272 25 дней назад +8

      'Three Men on the Bummel' by chance?

  • @lohphat
    @lohphat 25 дней назад +21

    Robslondon did a nice video on this too.

    • @bostonrailfan2427
      @bostonrailfan2427 25 дней назад +1

      probably where he got the actual idea from like several others he happened to be “inspired by”

  • @davidfarley5829
    @davidfarley5829 25 дней назад +20

    Gordon’s wine bar? That might be worth a video!

    • @brigidsingleton1596
      @brigidsingleton1596 25 дней назад +5

      I take it _that_ particular 'Gordon' is _not_ a "moron"?!

    • @cheesedoff-with4410
      @cheesedoff-with4410 25 дней назад +3

      If it's affectionately known as the Bat Cave by London cabbies, shouldn't it be Commissioner Gordon's wine bar?

    • @bob_the_bomb4508
      @bob_the_bomb4508 23 дня назад +1

      He’s alive?

    • @brigidsingleton1596
      @brigidsingleton1596 23 дня назад +1

      @@bob_the_bomb4508
      "Send Ajax to bring back his body...
      Gordon's alive...?!!"

  • @thatbritishmallard
    @thatbritishmallard 25 дней назад +28

    Greek speaker here: Αδέλφοι (Adélfi) does indeed mean Brothers, but it is not pronounced Adelfoi. Οι is a diagraph in Greek, meaning it is considered one sound, like ch in English. Οι transliterates to I, or somewhere abouts. Good pronunciation, though.

    • @frankhooper7871
      @frankhooper7871 25 дней назад +2

      I'm quite prepared to be corrected, but I believe there's a difference in pronunciation between ancient and modern Greek

    • @acciid
      @acciid 25 дней назад

      I've always wondered how that can be proven, given that there are no audio recordings of ancient Greek.
      Regardless, the οι digraph isn't one that has changed at far as I know. Unlike β which is a v sound or δ which is like a soft th. To do a b or d, modern greek uses two letters: μπ (mp) and ντ (nt).

    • @iggo45
      @iggo45 24 дня назад

      ​@@frankhooper7871​ good for you been prepared to be corrected. Let's go ....
      The two English brothers lived in 19th century, the commentator lives in 21st, and the writing of the establishment as is clearly shown in some underground black parking fences is "ADELPHI" @ 2:19
      So the mental inability of all English speakers to pronounce "I" in most cases like "i" in "incognito" or "inability" and instead as "I" in "I am" has nothing to do with the Greeks or their pronunciations. It's a totally English (and American) distortion, having to do with their brains.
      You don't believe me ? Go found a native Spanish speaker. Preferably of Caribbean or Mexican origin, but Spaniards or Argentinians will do also.
      Give them five words starting with "S" and tell them to pronounce them. Their mental capacity cannot handle it. They will add an "E" sound in the front. So if you give them "STUPID" they will say "ESTUPIDO"
      Same goes with Slavs pronouncing "th" in "therapy" or "th" in "the" They simply cannot pronounce it. They will say "FERAPY" and "DE"
      Simple facts.
      I'm proud to be a native Greek speaker myself.
      But we Greeks have same inability to pronounce many sounds of other languages. Like oʻòóôõøōŏőœọ èéêëēėęěĕəɛ ìíîïīı and àáâãäåāăą or сш, щч and зж
      So blame each language's mental incapacity to pronounce sounds of other humans and stop serving the same excuse of "ancient Greek pronunciation and phonology"
      Nothing is closer to ancient Greek, than the people who never moved away, never stopped negotiating in the markets, talking politics in coffee shops, singing in weddings and mourning in funerals.
      I don't want to make you fell bad. Only to make you understand how vast the phonology of languages is across the World, amongst humans, and the simple fact that some of us are compatible to pronounce a foreign sound, and some are not. At least not with a hell of a practice. That's why I included myself in the examples.
      And neither you or me can pronounce some african languages witch use the "click" of the tongue in the back of the mouth as natural sounds of every day talk.
      So. What I suggest?
      When a Greek tries to teach an English that Adelfoi pronounce Adelfi, an English tries to teach a Spaniard, that stomach is not pronounced estomach, a Spaniard tries to teach a Russian that Zaragoza is not pronounced FARAGOSA, and Kenyans teach all of us how to click our tongues, then trust the native talking to you ! Not your brain !

    • @iggo45
      @iggo45 24 дня назад

      ​@@frankhooper7871​@frankhooper7871 ​@frankhooper7871 good for you been prepared to be corrected. Let's go ....
      The two English brothers lived in 19th century, the commentator lives in 21st, and the writing of the establishment as is clearly shown in some underground black parking fences is "ADELPHI" @ 2:19
      So the mental inability of all English speakers to pronounce "I" in most cases like "i" in "incognito" or "inability" and instead as "I" in "I am" has nothing to do with the Greeks or their pronunciations. It's a totally English (and American) distortion, having to do with their brains.
      You don't believe me ? Go found a native Spanish speaker. Preferably of Caribbean or Mexican origin, but Spaniards or Argentinians will do also.
      Give them five words starting with "S" and tell them to pronounce them. Their mental capacity cannot handle it. They will add an "E" sound in the front. So if you give them "STUPID" they will say "ESTUPIDO"
      Same goes with Slavs pronouncing "th" in "therapy" or "th" in "the" They simply cannot pronounce it. They will say "FERAPY" and "DE"
      Simple facts.
      I'm proud to be a native Greek speaker myself.
      But we Greeks have same inability to pronounce many sounds of other languages. Like oʻòóôõøōŏőœọ èéêëēėęěĕəɛ ìíîïīı and àáâãäåāăą or сш, щч and зж
      So blame each language's mental incapacity to pronounce sounds of other humans and stop serving the same excuse of "ancient Greek pronunciation and phonology"
      Nothing is closer to ancient Greek, than the people who never moved away, never stopped negotiating in the markets, talking politics in coffee shops, singing in weddings and mourning in funerals.
      I don't want to make you fell bad. Only to make you understand how vast the phonology of languages is across the World, amongst humans, and the simple fact that some of us are compatible to pronounce a foreign sound, and some are not. At least not with a hell of a practice. That's why I included myself in the examples.
      And neither you or me can pronounce some african languages witch use the "click" of the tongue in the back of the mouth as natural sounds of every day talk.
      So. What I suggest?
      When a Greek tries to teach an English that Adelfoi pronounce Adelfi, an English tries to teach a Spaniard, that stomach is not pronounced estomach, a Spaniard tries to teach a Russian that Zaragoza is not pronounced FARAGOSA, and Kenyans teach all of us how to click our tongues, then trust the native talking to you ! Not your brain !

    • @tamara3984
      @tamara3984 24 дня назад

      ​@@acciid it's quite easy. The way Christopher and Connor are transliterated in Hebrew for example.

  • @Felix-nz7lq
    @Felix-nz7lq 25 дней назад +3

    Of all the places I’ve visited, I think only Berlin comes remotely close to London in just oozing with history around every little corner. Just because London already was a huge city even by modern standards back in the 1800s there’s just so incredibly much to explore.

  • @haroldsmith45302
    @haroldsmith45302 25 дней назад +4

    Good video, thank you. More explorations of obscure corners of London, please.

  • @towgod7985
    @towgod7985 25 дней назад +10

    You keep posting your videos just when I'am getting ready for work, I might need a note for my boss. Cheers 😂

  • @ICanPlayPiano
    @ICanPlayPiano 25 дней назад +4

    I actually had my photo taken standing next to the Strand WC2 street sign, having a banana!!

    • @araptorofnote5938
      @araptorofnote5938 16 дней назад +1

      I walked down the Strand wearing gloves. Then I took them off and walked back. Oi!

  • @nymalous3428
    @nymalous3428 25 дней назад +3

    Wow, all that from buying cheese. It's amazing what inspires historical research.
    I'd hate to drive through that tunnel, but I wouldn't mind walking. Maybe I'll visit if I'm ever in London.

  • @merlijnwiersma7801
    @merlijnwiersma7801 25 дней назад +4

    Amazingly, in my very limited London experience, I actually been here, after a mandatory visit to 10 Adams street we ended up here. (Are we allowed to be here? Well, it says 'street', so we use it as such!) I remember that at the base of the Adelphi, next to Victoria embankment, there was a homeless encampment. So some things never change...

  • @keith800
    @keith800 23 дня назад

    Lovely little video , London it seems is never ending with bits of historic interest and amazing how you find out the history of these little place's👍 .

  • @bollykecks
    @bollykecks 25 дней назад +28

    So, Jago suddenly came over all peckish, thought a little fermented curd would do the trick and infiltrated ... a cheese shop near Seven Dials. Hope they had some.
    😅

    • @iandixon2201
      @iandixon2201 25 дней назад +4

      As you beat me to it, can I add here that a version of the sketch first appeared in Don Quixote?

    • @tbjtbj7930
      @tbjtbj7930 25 дней назад +3

      Not much call for it in these parts...

    • @jaakkomantyjarvi7515
      @jaakkomantyjarvi7515 25 дней назад +2

      Jarlsberg?

    • @Rhubba
      @Rhubba 24 дня назад +1

      Eee ahhh 'ungry like.

  • @edwardalexander9486
    @edwardalexander9486 25 дней назад +27

    I think Rob's London did this a while ago? Not that I'm knocking this - great to have another look and will now def visit.

  • @wisecur
    @wisecur 25 дней назад +3

    I used to work in the Adelphi Building in the late 80s. I recognised the street when you posted it on Instagram.

  • @jadeboswell-rz2ly
    @jadeboswell-rz2ly 25 дней назад +2

    Great video Jago, you are the Mr Wensleydale to the cheese emporium. Neal's off borough mkt.

  • @fernandofairbanks1469
    @fernandofairbanks1469 25 дней назад +15

    We always love a video on roads around the Underground stations

  • @brianday873
    @brianday873 22 дня назад

    Great watch thanks. I work I was born and bred in London but moved out in 1982 when I joined the army. I never went back to live but my current job has me working in Islington and Hackney and Dalston - which means a 5am road commute from my house in Epsom.
    I hate working there to be honest. I might take some time to have a nimble areound in the summer

  • @ne5i_
    @ne5i_ 21 день назад

    Saw this yesterday, immediately used my new knowledge today getting from the Savoy theatre to embankment after the park closed. Thanks!

  • @johnhooper7040
    @johnhooper7040 День назад

    Fascinating! I used to work near these odd streets and discovered them by accident. I didn't have the nerve to explore them in detail on foot as it was difficult to know where public access ended and private space commenced. London has so many unusual places to explore.

  • @mkendallpk4321
    @mkendallpk4321 25 дней назад +10

    I seem to remember that Robslondon did a video on this street. And yet, I found this one very informative and interesting too.

  • @emgee44
    @emgee44 25 дней назад +4

    I used to drive through a lot back in the Eighties whenever it was my turn to drive the lads up the West End. It always made me laugh as they thought I was driving down a dead end, only to turn at the last minute into the tunnel and come out on the Strand.😂

    • @davidjames579
      @davidjames579 25 дней назад

      Does out it come out on The Strand? It seems to have its entrance on York Buildings.

    • @AtheistOrphan
      @AtheistOrphan 25 дней назад

      @@davidjames579- Perhaps check it out on Google Streetview?

  • @tonywhitmore
    @tonywhitmore 25 дней назад +3

    Neal's Yard is cheese heaven. And the street food at Seven Dials market is worth trying too.

  • @judebrown2672
    @judebrown2672 11 дней назад

    Fascinating. I love stuff like this. From Portsmouth UK. I once went on a Jack the Ripper tour of London. That was amazing.

  • @alejandrayalanbowman367
    @alejandrayalanbowman367 25 дней назад +7

    Good evening Jago from Spain. Every other Friday we have a van comes by with fresh goat's cheese. So we get fresh cheese that is't available in the shops or supermarkets. We have been to the dairy in the past so we know that the quality of the place and cleanliness is 100%

  • @Tevildo
    @Tevildo 25 дней назад +10

    4:20 - I think we can be confident that it was a civil servant who thought "End of British Summer Time to 15 February" was a good way of specifiying a date range.

    • @rosiefay7283
      @rosiefay7283 25 дней назад +2

      Indeed, a perfectly good way!

    • @AndreiTupolev
      @AndreiTupolev 25 дней назад +3

      The list is so long it goes on to a second column! "1 March to commencement of British Summer Time ... 1 April to 15 April ... 16 April to 30 April ..." A bureaucrat's way saying "until it gets dark" 🤧

    • @Tevildo
      @Tevildo 25 дней назад +1

      @@AndreiTupolev At least they didn't specify the use of a photometer to determine if it was dark or not. 😺

    • @thesteelrodent1796
      @thesteelrodent1796 24 дня назад +1

      that's such an absurd way of writing that sign. In Denmark they write something like "open 8 to 20 or sunrise to sunset, whichever comes first", but since only a few of our historical gardens ever close, typically it translates to "if the gate's locked, the park is closed"

    • @57thorns
      @57thorns 24 дня назад

      @@thesteelrodent1796 That is definitely the reason, but then there is the debate on which sunset/sunrise you should use. And the closing time would change every day, quite annoying.

  • @kevinmottram9491
    @kevinmottram9491 25 дней назад +3

    "Excuse me sir, is this a cheese shop?" "Yes it is." "Oh..."

  • @simonfazzani7292
    @simonfazzani7292 25 дней назад +7

    London is just so diverse, I love it

  • @jeffsparkes3430
    @jeffsparkes3430 5 дней назад

    I was in London last month and couldn't remember where this Street was, so I'm pleased to see your video appear and now I know where to go :)

  • @dodgydruid
    @dodgydruid 24 дня назад +1

    One Strand thing you could find out if you can because the American "we flew first" brigade have been very efficient at erasing events that might upset that viewpoint, is in Victorian times a French inventor flew by remote control a monoplane down the length of the Strand to the wows of the folks lining the street, dunno why this particular event upsets the Wrights did everything camp as it wasn't manned but it did highlight a monoplane as opposed to a manyplane and apparently it flew extremely well something that could not be said about the Wright's maiden voyages which were notably lurching and short.

  • @ajfrostx
    @ajfrostx 21 день назад

    Back in mid-2010s I used to work in an office nearby and never realised what this odd hole was!
    Thank you Jago!

  • @defender1006
    @defender1006 24 дня назад

    Thank you for that, I thought I knew that part of London fairly well, but I was ignorance/oblivious to it despite spending quite a bit of time in that aera back in the late last century.

  • @ianbaram3043
    @ianbaram3043 24 дня назад +1

    the name and style reminds me of chicago's lower level streets, which there are a ton of along the river to separate deliveries and waste removal on the lower level from pedestrian and shopping traffic on the upper level

  • @doctordeej
    @doctordeej 24 дня назад

    I love wandering around the streets that are just of the tourist routes, the ‘Monoply’ parts, as I refer to them. They are invariably quiet, and have some fascinating architecture and points of interest. I know that area quite well, having worked on Northumberland Avenue, and being a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, who’s building ins in John Adam Street, seen at te end of this video. Indeed, possibly not one for you, Jago, as it not very Railway orientated, would be a history of the various clubs in London. Plenty of history (who founded them, famous members, scandals etc.). No doubt I will be flooded with RUclips recommendations now. In fact, I’m off to search for some now.

  • @TigerTailsTV
    @TigerTailsTV 23 дня назад

    I was visiting London for Pride and took a drink at the Retro Bar. Upon leaving, we passed Lower Robert Street, and I wondered where it went/what it was for as it seemed to be a road in a building. Now I know. Thank you!

  • @Ice_Karma
    @Ice_Karma 24 дня назад +2

    From a _very_ early age, "adelphoi" was pronounced "adelphi". [Edit:] No, your pronunciation of Diocletian is on point. [Edit 2:] A "strand" is a "beach".

  • @Feakre
    @Feakre 25 дней назад +2

    I feel we should know. What is your favourite cheese, from your favourite cheese shop?
    Venezuelan beaver cheese?
    Gruyere? Emmental?
    Danish blue?
    Cheshire?
    Dorset blue vinney?
    Brie, Roquefort, Pont-l'Évêque, Port Salut, Savoyard, Saint-Paulin, Carre-de-L'Est, Boursin, Bresse-Bleu, Perle de Champagne?
    Red Windsor?
    How about Cheddar?

    • @emjayay
      @emjayay 23 дня назад

      Wensleydale, probably.

  • @isashax
    @isashax 25 дней назад

    I was hoping for more information after I saw your photo. Good stuff!

  • @PaulRussam
    @PaulRussam 25 дней назад +8

    I used to work on Adam St in an odd little building, it’s blurred out in google maps but I think it’s no 7 or 8. It has 3 floors BELOW Adam street with the lowest having an exit to Robert st. So what appears to be a 4 story building at street level is actually a 7 story.

  • @davidjames579
    @davidjames579 25 дней назад

    This is fascinating! I love how it looks like an entrance to that building rather than a street so most people wouldn't go down it. The tunnel to the left appears to go to The Adelphi Hotel's basement?

  • @pierremainstone-mitchell8290
    @pierremainstone-mitchell8290 24 дня назад

    Nice one Jago. Yet another of the nooks and crannies of London!

  • @asheland_numismatics
    @asheland_numismatics 23 дня назад +1

    Cool video. 👍

  • @louminati4318
    @louminati4318 22 дня назад +2

    Lower Robert Street is the only survivor of a complexed set of subterranean tunnels. I've got a book with old photos.

  • @triptechable
    @triptechable 4 дня назад

    I've worked there! There's a claimed ancient Roman spa there called Aire Spa. A very very interesting place. Access is via Robert Street but the access to the behind the scenes is on lower Robert street. You can see the brown metal hates in this video.

  • @KoanGrasshopperX
    @KoanGrasshopperX 24 дня назад +1

    The haunting sounds interesting and i never made the connection until now "Strand" is Dutch for beach, so it makes sense to be a word for Riverside in the UK

    • @paulohagan3309
      @paulohagan3309 13 дней назад +1

      Neither here nor there but for years the signs in Ireland pointing to the beach always used the word 'strand' instead of 'beach'. Probably still do somewhere though I haven't seen one for ages as I don't go to the beach much now.

  • @Saint_Dan132
    @Saint_Dan132 25 дней назад

    nice, thanks for sharing

  • @benjones1452
    @benjones1452 10 дней назад

    Thanks, that was interesting, aware of the Adam brothers I had not come across this fascinating story.

  • @ProfessorPesca
    @ProfessorPesca 20 дней назад

    Absolutely wonderful stuff

  • @victorymansions
    @victorymansions 15 дней назад

    This is the kinda channel that deserves a sub 👏

  • @McRocket
    @McRocket 16 дней назад

    Very interesting.
    Thank you.

  • @eattherich9215
    @eattherich9215 25 дней назад +2

    I love a tale of secret streets.

  • @Kevin_Hones
    @Kevin_Hones 25 дней назад +2

    I was awaiting the phrase “I curtailed my Walpoleing activities” but it never came 😮

  • @pl0mp378
    @pl0mp378 20 дней назад

    remember skating down that road a couple months ago because it was a cool little hill, never knew there was a story to it xd

  • @TheBeansta
    @TheBeansta 25 дней назад

    Hi Jago! Jezebel the fire engine has driven through that a few times - she *just* fits through the gate at the end

  • @lefthandedspanner
    @lefthandedspanner 25 дней назад +2

    if the street is a public highway, as opposed to being part of a private property, it's quite likely that 10 mph speed limit sign at 2:25 is legally unenforcable
    the only permitted standard variants of the speed limit sign are 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, and 70 - anything else has to be authorised by central government on an individual basis

    • @spoonatic
      @spoonatic 25 дней назад

      Speed nerd!

    • @brigidsingleton1596
      @brigidsingleton1596 25 дней назад

      Designed (perhaps) with horse-drawn vehicles in mind?

    • @hairyairey
      @hairyairey 25 дней назад

      That's a whole can of worms, because even a private road that is open to the public is considered a public highway. A legal change made necessary by car cruising events.

    • @petercallaghan2948
      @petercallaghan2948 25 дней назад +2

      There is a 45 between East Grinstead and Forest Row, I have wondered why, as never seen anywhere else 🤔

    • @hexpose
      @hexpose 14 дней назад

      The ground where the Adelphi terrace was built was granted to the Adam brothers and several others by the Thames Embankment Act 1771, and the cellars were sold in 1936 when the Adelphi was demolished, so I'm pretty that this is still private property with a public way passing through. The cellars themselves weren't gated off as a car park until ~1980 so the speed limit may have been obtained around that time.

  • @Phil-oj5nr
    @Phil-oj5nr 24 дня назад

    Walking up to Camden Markets it 2014, I ducked down a side street to the left. One property was numbered 221B, but it wasn’t Baker Street! Silly me, I didn’t get a photo.
    Love all those quirky streets and alleys in cities.

  • @madcyclist58
    @madcyclist58 23 дня назад +1

    It's staggering how much architecture has been built and demolished over the centuries.

  • @Lego6980
    @Lego6980 25 дней назад

    Thanks Jago - Defo I’ll check this one out.

  • @stuartr7785
    @stuartr7785 25 дней назад +1

    Being pedantic, nay correct, is perfectly acceptable. After all, we don’t say The Whitehall, or The Piccadilly. Laziness among some bloggers can see the reference to The Strand. Mind you, Simpsons in the Strand, and a well known music hall song, don’t help matters.

    • @kgbgb3663
      @kgbgb3663 23 дня назад

      Why would you say "the Picadilly"? There are not lots of picadillies, of which just one is called _the_ Picadilly, while there _are_ lots of strands, of which just one is _the_ Strand.
      "Picadilly" and "the Strand" obey the rule of English Grammar that referring to just one of a set of things covered by a description or a common noun gets a "the", and if you make a proper noun out of the result, it also gets a capital letter.
      I'll give you that "Whitehall", without a "the", breaks the rule, but that is no argument for breaking it elsewhere.

  • @aufrere
    @aufrere 24 дня назад

    Fascinating !

  • @teecefamilykent
    @teecefamilykent 25 дней назад

    Brilliant video, you sound so posh when talking about the wine bar lol

  • @spunkychops7484
    @spunkychops7484 25 дней назад +1

    Up jago's dark back passage is very interesting

  • @LeoStarrenburg
    @LeoStarrenburg 25 дней назад +10

    Neal's Yard Dairy is on the 'to vist' list ! Tip: If you can find it, try a Normandy Pont-l'Évêque, and/or a Dutch Leidsche kaas with the red rind and keys, aged is best.

    • @barrymccurdy8765
      @barrymccurdy8765 25 дней назад +1

      Discovered Neal's Yard Dairy on line during COVID-19 when we couldn't just wander around London. My favourite from there is Tunworth, although this is now more widely distributed and can be found in classier supermarkets.

    • @brianartillery
      @brianartillery 25 дней назад +1

      I am very partial to Golden Cross, a goats milk cheese that does not taste 'goaty'.
      Other cheese I love, includes:
      Parlick Fell;
      Dorset Blue Vinney;
      Dorset Red;
      Lord London;
      Renegade Monk;
      Cashel Blue;
      Ossau-Iraty;
      Gjetost;
      Pitchfork Cheddar;
      Baron Bigod;
      Minger;
      Young Buck;
      Gorwydd Caerphilly.

    • @davidcronan4072
      @davidcronan4072 25 дней назад +2

      @@brianartillery Sounds a bit like the Monty Python cheese shop sketch.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 25 дней назад

      bought mine in Normandy

    • @brianartillery
      @brianartillery 25 дней назад +1

      @@davidcronan4072 - A tad, but most, other than the Ossau-Iraty, which is a cheese type that goes back possibly thousands of years, are modern. There are over 800 different types of cheese made in the UK nowadays. 800. In the 1970's, when the first small cheese producers' survey was taken, there were possibly 20-30. Also, a lot of traditional British cheeses, like Dorset Blue Vinney (still only available from one producer) had died out, some forever. Dorset Blue Vinney directly because of the last war, when milk was used to make basic 'lasting' cheese.

  • @Scodiddly
    @Scodiddly 25 дней назад +2

    Like a little tiny version of Lower Wacker Drive in Chicago. Another interesting result of many years of architectural buildup.

    • @SteamCrane
      @SteamCrane 24 дня назад

      Was that in Blues Brothers?

    • @Scodiddly
      @Scodiddly 24 дня назад

      @@SteamCrane "This is definitely Lower Wacker Drive" :) :) :)

  • @fluffyfour
    @fluffyfour 25 дней назад +2

    I am Diocletian and I'd like to make a complaint!
    You pronounced my name correctly, but I'm an Emperor so I'm putting in a complaint just to make sure you know you're not an Emperor.
    Like what I am.

  • @CarolineFord1
    @CarolineFord1 25 дней назад

    I may have to go exploring round there!

  • @Tirebouchon325
    @Tirebouchon325 25 дней назад

    Lovely video. Thanks. Am now curious as to what your favorite cheese shop is.

  • @todayonthebench
    @todayonthebench 9 дней назад

    1:40 "the name strand means basically water front."
    In my native tongue Swedish, we have the word "Strand" that means beach, but also an old term used for water front.

  • @DeathInTheSnow
    @DeathInTheSnow 25 дней назад +22

    The existence of a "Lower Robert Street" implies a "Higher Robert Street". And perhaps a middle-of-the-road "Robert Street" as well.
    More investigation is needed 🤔

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 25 дней назад +7

      There we have it, Bob's your uncle?

    • @MartinE63
      @MartinE63 25 дней назад +8

      Most of Lower Robert Street is directly below Robert Street

  • @davesy6969
    @davesy6969 21 день назад

    I remember that. I was a despatch rider for years and very rarely went there.

  • @martijnkeisers5900
    @martijnkeisers5900 22 дня назад +1

    Strand in Dutch means beach, greetings from Amsterdam! ❤

  • @TheEarlofK
    @TheEarlofK 7 дней назад

    Well, I wasn't aware of this street or the history behind it, so I'm grateful for the video.

  • @michaelwilson6584
    @michaelwilson6584 23 дня назад

    As a student at King’s College in the Strand, I thought I knew this area well. Embankment, Drury Lane, Holborn, etc. were regularly haunts as was Aldwych station which was still on the Underground and not a portal into Narnia. But I never knew this shortcut/street although I must have walked past it dozens of times. I’ll be on the lookout for it next time I’m in the area…

  • @jimmyadams628
    @jimmyadams628 25 дней назад +4

    I am James Adams, from Ireland and am a big fan of your channel, also a big fan of London. I knew about this on a visit a couple of years ago. 😆

    • @el_es
      @el_es 25 дней назад

      It's funny how many places names in Dublin are same or similar as in London :D

  • @andyjay729
    @andyjay729 25 дней назад +5

    And some commenters already mentioned it, but "strand" still means "waterside" or "beach" in the other Germanic languages.

  • @soulsaver369
    @soulsaver369 23 дня назад

    @ 4.08 where you reached the end of the street across from you was a path with blue railings and this path takes you to the "Secret garden".

  • @reggie18b
    @reggie18b 16 дней назад

    'Strand' is German for 'beach'. I had always wondered if there was a connection (especially given the English word 'stranded'. Thanks for confirming my suspicions.

  • @dombat
    @dombat 24 дня назад

    I’m surprised you’ve just learned of this, Jago. It’s been covered by several other London history content creators, to the extent I would have misremembered you being one of them!

  • @xaxabogbart
    @xaxabogbart 22 дня назад

    I happened upon this area and looked around before I got a tube to my destination a couple of weeks back

  • @unclenogbad1509
    @unclenogbad1509 24 дня назад +1

    Yeah, that's London for you. Nowhere else would regard that underground rat-hole as a 'street'; but in London, that's how it started, so that's what it stays. I love my home city.

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. 25 дней назад +2

    Imagine if Jago was a medium. Wouldn’t that be something? A historian who can cite primary sources.

    • @AndreiTupolev
      @AndreiTupolev 25 дней назад +5

      I can't wait for his interview with Charles T. Yerkes 😎

    • @jaakkomantyjarvi7515
      @jaakkomantyjarvi7515 25 дней назад +1

      Judging by his appearance in Jay Foreman's Tube map history video, I'd say he's a large rather than a medium. No offense intended.

    • @davidjames579
      @davidjames579 25 дней назад +1

      ​@@AndreiTupolevI don't think Charles would be happy. What have you been saying about me Jago?

  • @user-jt4bv9xt1p
    @user-jt4bv9xt1p 11 дней назад

    Thanks for this. I’ve seen this street many times but thought it just an entrance to a car park.
    Oh boring me.

  • @darganx
    @darganx 25 дней назад

    The whole area near the Adelphi, the where the Savoy is situated, also has some interesting history around it. Maybe Jago could have a go at it?