London Royal Observatory Greenwich Tickets
About this activity
Smartphone tickets accepted
- Your booking is confirmed immediately
- This activity is available in your language
Experience Highlights
These tickets to the Greenwich Observatory in London will give you an unforgettable experience where you can stand on the meridian line that divides the eastern and western hemispheres of the planet. You'll discover the wonderful history of the place where the first ever star map was drawn, the GMT time zone was established and the first maritime navigation device was created.
- See the legendary work of astronomers and physicists who plotted the Greenwich Meridian, established the GMT time zone and created the first GPS.
- Learn all there is to know about this historic site with your downloadable digital audio guide.
- Show your e-ticket at the admission desk and stand on the line that divides the planet at 0° longitude in the Observatory's courtyard.
- Visit the Great Equatorial Telescope and get one of the most beautiful views in London.
What’s included
- Access to the Royal Observatory, the Meridian line, Flamsteed House, John Harrison's timekeepers, Camera Obscura, the Great Equatorial Telescope, the Astronomy Centre, the Altazimuth Pavilion and the galleries.
- Downloadable digital audio guide
- Entrance to the Peter Harrison Planetarium
Select date and time
Step by Step
Explore momentous episodes in astronomy with these tickets to the Greenwich Observatory in London, where the world's time zones were first established and the initial meridian line of longitude 0° was drawn , an imaginary circumference dividing the planet into the eastern and western hemispheres.
You will have the opportunity to have your photo taken split between the two hemispheres of the Earth, with absolute precision, by placing one foot on the eastern and one on the western side of the line, located in the courtyard of the Observatory.
You will learn about the impressive history of the place created by the British astronomer John Flamsteed, who with his observation of the firmament contributed to the solution of one of the greatest problems of the time: determining the precise location.
From this observatory, the works of physicists and astronomers such as Edmund Halley, who published the first catalogue of stars thanks to his work with the Greenwich telescopes, materialised.
You'll enter Flamsteed's home to see the iconic Time Ball, a red ball that rests on the roof of the house and drops on time at 13:00 every day, symbolically marking the advance of time.
You'll see the iconic clocks of John Harrison, who also from this historic Greenwich enclave devised what is arguably the world's first maritime navigation GPS.
You'll have a downloadable digital audio guide so that, as well as viewing the objects and places that changed world history, you'll enjoy a learning tour of all the theories of these geniuses and their inventions.
You will be in front of the Great Equatorial Telescope, inside the great Dome, and you will see the Altazimuth pavilion, where a telescope was used to measure altitude at the time.