Chiswick to Windsor
Most people experience west London en route to or from Heathrow
airport, either from the confines of the train or tube (which runs
overground most of the way) or the motorway. The city and its
satellites seem to continue unabated, with only fleeting glimpses
of the countryside. However, in the five-mile stretch from Chiswick
to Osterley there are several former country retreats, now
surrounded by suburbia, which are definitely worth digging out.
The Palladian villa of Chiswick House is perhaps the best
known of these attractions, though it draws nothing like as many
visitors as Syon House , most of whom come for the gardening
centre rather than for the house itself, a showcase for the talents
of Robert Adam, who also worked at Osterley House , another
Elizabethan conversion, now owned by the National Trust.
Running through much of the section is the River Thames
, once known as the "Great Highway of London" and still the most
pleasant way to travel in these parts during the summer. Boats
plough up the Thames all the way from central London, via the
botanical gardens of Kew and the picturesque riverside at
Richmond , as far as Hampton Court , home of the
country's largest and most impressive royal residence (and the
famous maze). To reach the heavily touristed royal outpost of
Windsor Castle , however, you really need to take the
train.
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