Greenwich in London may be known for its world-class museums and iconic buildings but it’s also home to an abundance of lesser-known delights.

From unusual views and underground tunnels to unique museums and quiet green spaces, these hidden gems will provide a special extra layer to your Greenwich experience.

Getting to Greenwich

Start by visiting the Queen's House in the heart of historic Greenwich. All these sights are within a short walk

Climb Britain’s first spiral staircase

The ornate Tulip Stairs in Inigo Jones’ beautifully designed Queen’s House is a blue wrought-iron spiral staircase that links the ground and first floors.

It was the first self-supporting spiral staircase in Britain when it was built in the early 1600s, and its snail-like form is innately photogenic.

The staircase is also the location of the Reverend R W Hardy’s spooky, and still unexplained, ‘ghost’ photograph taken in 1966, which appears to show shrouded figures on the staircase.

Visit the Tulip Stairs

Walk beneath the Thames via the Greenwich Foot Tunnel

Greenwich Foot Tunnel
Image courtesy of Poudou99/Wikimedia Commons

Did you know that the north and south banks of the Thames are connected by a century-old tunnel underneath the river? Though hundreds of people use it every day, the Greenwich Foot Tunnel remains something of a hidden (quite literally) gem. Built in the early 1900s for dockworkers living south of the river, the tunnel is around 1,200 feet (366m) long and 50 feet deep.

Take the ten-minute walk through it from the Isle of Dogs and you’ll emerge right next to Cutty Sark via a pleasing, Grade-II listed brick-and-glass dome exit.

Enjoy afternoon tea under Cutty Sark

Afternoon tea at Cutty Sark's Even Keel cafe

After exploring the ship and meeting the characters on board, relax and enjoy the British tradition of afternoon tea. Located underneath the world’s sole surviving tea clipper, the Cutty Sark café is a great place to relax as well as being in a unique setting of underneath the original hull of this spectacular ship.

Find out more

Explore space at London's only Planetarium

An audience enjoys a Planetarium show at the Royal Observatory. They are lying back in big armchairs, staring up at a ceiling filled with blue light projections of distant galaxies

Take a tour of the Universe and experience the wonders of the night sky at the Royal Observatory's dedicated Planetarium theatre. Each show is hosted by a real astronomer, and they'll lead you through an interactive tour of the universe featuring live commentary, genuine space photography and incredible animation.

See what's on

Explore the secret corners of Greenwich Park

The Rose Garden in Greenwich Park

Did you know that Greenwich Park is home to a herd of Red and Fallow deer? Or that London’s longest herbaceous border (at 200m) is here? There's a beautiful rose garden by the Ranger's House, a Georgian villa originally the residence of the Park Ranger, and the historic Queen’s Orchard with fruit trees, pathways and ponds.

Don't forget to climb to the top of the hill in Greenwich Park and outside the Royal Observatory to enjoy the best view of London.

Explore Greenwich Park

View Greenwich through a camera obscura

Camera obscura F4026-2_slider

Get an alternative view of Greenwich by looking through the fascinatingly intricate camera obscura at the Royal Observatory Greenwich.

Housed in a small summerhouse in the Meridian Courtyard, the camera was installed in 1994 and shows a close-up, moving panorama of the Thames, the National Maritime Museum and the Old Royal Naval College. It’s the most recent in a long line of camera obscuras to be displayed here, with the first dating back to the late 17th century.

Visit the camera obscura

Spot the former home of Daniel Day-Lewis

Greenwich is well-known as the birthplace of royalty – most famously Henry VIII and Elizabeth I. But did you know that it’s also the childhood home of acting royalty, in the form of Daniel Day-Lewis? The Oscar winner’s former home on Crooms Hill, where Astronomer Royal Sir George Airy also once lived, is identifiable by a blue plaque – though not one bearing his name, but his father’s. Cecil Day-Lewis was an Anglo-Irish poet who held the post of Poet Laureate from 1968 to 1972.

Stroll around a popular film location

The Old Royal Naval College is on the itineraries of many a Greenwich day-tripper. And rightly so. But the elegant columns and classical domes of Sir Christopher Wren’s masterpiece aren’t the only reason for a visit. Fans of the 2012 film Les Miserables might be interested to hear that the film, though set in Paris, was actually filmed here – as were scenes from Four Weddings and a Funeral (one of the weddings takes place in the Chapel), Pirates of the Caribbean (in which you’ll spot the magnificent Painted Hall), The Avengers and Guy Ritchie's Sherlock Holmes.

Find more filming locations in Greenwich

Visit Greenwich

Green space, historic attractions and beautiful riverside views - discover the best that Greenwich has to offer