How fast is the lift?” I asked
“6 meters a second!”
Someone behind me said they were Ferrari lifts and we laughed nervously. We were in one of these dark futuristic lifts with
smouldering lights. It felt like we were about to take off to a different planet. There were no seat belts. I expected my insides to move around a bit once the lift stopped but nothing happened. I do remember some music playing in the background but I was too scared to notice what it was. We were heading to the 69th floor to experience London’s newest attraction, the vertical beauty of London called the Shard.
We were welcomed at Reception which looked like a modern cinema, behind it a screen showed ticket availability as there is a daily limit of 400 people to visit the Shard. If you simply turn up the ticket price could be very high, up to £100, you have to book well in advance. We were lucky as we were invited to experience the Shard on a preview organised for travel agents in the UK. The official opening for the public will be in February 2013.
On arrival at the 69th floor we were left to explore on our own and there was so much to see in 360 degrees. We were lucky with the weather too and could see almost as far as Dover! The only bad things was that London City airport is too close giving you a full view of British Airways planes registration numbers. It seemed like we were flying with the passing planes. The truth is that I am not a very good flyer!
We moved up to the next level and discovered a new toy – binoculars which project images in front of you. Forget about putting 20p
into a machine then spending time finding the right focus – this is a different futuristic level of seeing through lenses. I still don’t know how it works but I think a laser is cantered onto a certain view and an image is projected onto a small screen built within the machine. The question is – is that image live or is everything pre-recorded as on Google maps? I don’t know but would like to find out….
We played for a while then started running around the observation desk again. As it was a preview workers were still around, one hanging above our head on one of the spires above floor 72…It looked scary and the last observation desk is semi-open so we could feel a draft. After so much excitement we decided to test the Ferrari lifts again and go down. In the shop on the ground floor we bought fridge magnets ready to brag about a new addition to the London skyline. The ever-so-friendly guide advised us to come in the evening when the London lights are switched on. Watch this space!
The Shard building is combination of residential areas (floors 53 -65), Hotel (floors 34 – 52), Restaurants (floors 31- 33), offices (from 2- 28) with an added Spa on the 52th floor, Observatory from the 68th – 72rd floors and the Spire from the 73rd to 95th floors.
The Shard is the tallest building in the EC, the second tallest in Europe (the tallest is Mercury City Tower still under construction) and the Shard has the tallest viewing gallery and open-air observation deck in the UK! And the best views!
More images on our Facebook.