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Thursday, 20 November 2008 08:26 GMT
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An escort's guide to... Pimlico
If you and your sexy escort companion are exploring London north of the Thames and find yourself only a few stops away from Victoria tube station, it’d be well worth your while dropping in on Pimlico, a small close-knit village-like borough right at the heart of the city. It’s a popular area with London escorts because of the very high quality of shopping available - there are some very good shopping streets in the borough and it’s also a great place to stop for lunch. Pimlico’s not big, so practically everything worth seeing is within walking distance of Victoria. There are some very good pubs in the area too – any good London escort should know a few of them - particular the Gallery on Lupus Street, the Morpeth Arms on Milbank, the White Swan on Vauxhall Bridge Road and the Spread Eagle facing the river on Grosvenor Road.
Pimlico is home to one of London’s most famous tourist attractions – in fact, one of the most famous tourist attractions in the world. No outcall appointment with a sexy London escort girl is complete without a trip to the Tate Britain, which houses the very best in historical and contemporary British art, and contrary to its name, it is also home to some amazing collections from other countries. If it’s architecture you’re interested in, Pimlico has its share of gems – the Tate Britain itself is impressive, and the distinctive red brick façade of the former Royal Army Medical College building (now part of the Chelsea College of Art and Design) is also worth a look.
Pimlico has had some colourful episodes in its history, ranging from the grim to the glorious – and quite a few of them involving cute and horny young blonde, brunette and redhead escorts. On the riverside, near where the Milbank prison stood in the 19th-century, is a plaque commemorating the spot from which British prisoners were dispatched for transportation to Australia. The district was also at one time home to Winston Churchill, and it’s on Causton Street, in the now-long-gone Vanilla Studios, that The Clash recorded their famous 1979 album London Calling.
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