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48 Hours in Earl’s Court: How to Do London Properly (Starting from The Courtfield)
Two days is enough to do this part of London properly — three of the world’s finest museums, a Victorian garden cemetery, the best French brasserie street in the city, Hyde Park, and a couple of genuinely excellent restaurants, almost all of it walkable from Courtfield Gardens.
Day One: Albertopolis and South Kensington
Morning
Start with breakfast at Daquise on Thurloe Street (eight minutes on foot), South Kensington’s iconic Polish restaurant open since 1947. Then walk north to the Natural History Museum — aim to arrive as it opens to get ahead of the school groups. The blue whale, the dinosaur gallery, and the terracotta facade are all worth the full morning; don’t try to do more than one museum in a day.
London’s oldest Polish restaurant, open on Thurloe Street since 1947. The right start before a morning in the museums — and worth visiting while it still can be.
View on map →Arrive as it opens to get ahead of the school groups. The terracotta facade, the blue whale, the dinosaur gallery — give it the full morning, not a rushed hour.
View on map →Afternoon
Lunch along Bute Street — pick any of the French brasseries and don’t overthink it. Then cross into the Victoria & Albert Museum for the afternoon: the world’s greatest collection of art and design, free to enter, and large enough to spend three hours without doubling back. The Cast Courts alone justify the visit.
South Kensington’s French brasserie street — pick any, don’t overthink it. The right lunch between museums.
View on map →The world’s greatest collection of art and design — free entry, three hours minimum, and the Cast Courts alone justify the visit.
View on map →Early Evening
Walk back through South Kensington village, past the cafés on Thurloe Place. If the weather’s cooperating, Hyde Park is ten minutes from The Courtfield — the right amount of green space to decompress before dinner.
Evening
Dinner at Tendido Cero on Old Brompton Road — Spanish tapas, superb wine, and the kind of convivial room that makes an evening run longer than planned. Walk back to Courtfield Gardens in under fifteen minutes.
Day Two: Chelsea, the Cemetery, and Leighton House
Morning
Start at Brompton Cemetery (ten minutes on foot) before the day gets going — a Grade I listed Victorian garden cemetery, one of the original Magnificent Seven, and genuinely one of the most peaceful and architecturally remarkable places in London that most visitors never find. Allow an hour.
Late Morning
Leighton House Museum (ten minutes) is the other recommendation most guests to this part of London miss. The former home and studio of Victorian painter Lord Frederic Leighton, recently restored, with an Arab Hall at its centre that stops people in their tracks. Less crowded than every other cultural destination within walking distance, and all the better for it.
Afternoon
Head south to Chelsea and the King’s Road (twenty minutes on foot or a short tube). Independent shops, the Chelsea Physic Garden if it’s the right season, and the kind of unhurried wandering that the King’s Road rewards if you go beyond the obvious stretch. Colbert on Sloane Square is the lunch or afternoon stop — a grand Parisian-style brasserie that does everything well.
Independent shops and the kind of unhurried afternoon that the King’s Road rewards when you go beyond the obvious stretch.
View on map →Free, well-programmed contemporary art on Duke of York Square — a good stop if the afternoon calls for something more considered than shopping.
View on map →A grand all-day Parisian brasserie on Sloane Square — steak frites, croque monsieur, and an excellent set lunch to close out the afternoon before heading home.
View on map →Evening
Close out the trip with dinner at Daquise — proper Polish cooking in the candlelit dining room, which feels considerably romantic. A ten-minute walk home from the front door of The Courtfield.
Getting There and Away
Gloucester Road station (Circle, District, and Piccadilly lines) is five minutes from The Courtfield — Piccadilly direct to Heathrow in 35 minutes, no changes. Earl’s Court station (District and Piccadilly) is eight minutes on foot, adding direct westbound connections. Victoria and Paddington are both reachable without changing.
Two days, almost everything on foot, and a Victorian garden square to come back to in between.
Plan your stay: view The Courtfield’s apartments. For more on the area, read The Courtfield Edit: An Honest Guide to Earl’s Court & South Kensington and Where to Eat in Earl’s Court & South Kensington.