London // United Kingdom
Journeyed Destinations
- Big Ben
- Westminster Abbey
- Palace of Westminster
- The British Museum
- The National Gallery
- Natural History Museum
- Science Museum
- Victoria and Albert Museum
- HERE at Outernet
- Victoria Memorial
- Buckingham Palace
- London Eye
- City Hall
- The Shard
- v30 St Mary Axe “The Gherkin”
- Tower of London
- Westminster Bridge
- Tower Bridge
- London Bridge
- Millennium Bridge
- Hungerford Bridge
- Chinatown
03/May/2023


London, a timeless metropolis steeped in history and innovation, showcases a captivating architectural tapestry shaped by the hands of visionary creators. The city's skyline is a harmonious blend of ancient and contemporary, reflecting its rich past and progressive present.
From the grandeur of Sir Christopher Wren's St. Paul's Cathedral, a symbol of resilience rising from the ashes of the Great Fire to the modernist marvels envisioned by Sir Norman Foster, like the iconic Gherkin, London's architectural diversity is a mirror of its global prominence.
...The smell of distance. Evening was slowly settling onto the city’s shoulders, and the cobblestones beneath my feet made a faint crushing sound not outside, but somewhere inside my head. The sound of something old collapsing. Maybe the distance between imagination and reality.
I pulled my backpack tighter onto my shoulders. My camera rested in my hand, but I didn’t dare lift it. Some moments die the instant you try to capture them.
The city was loud.
But for me, there was only silence.
And inside that silence, one thing flowed.
A piano.
The same piece I used to listen to years ago, back when this place was only a possibility, when I would walk alone in my room and imagine myself climbing toward Piazzale Michelangelo. Back then, it was just a beautiful lie I told myself to survive.
Now the street beneath my feet was real.
The air was half clouded, half clear. Even the sky seemed undecided, as if it didn’t know whether this moment was real or still a dream.
Every step was a collision.
Between who I used to be and who I have become.
And the most terrifying part was this:
The city didn’t feel unfamiliar.
It felt like something I had left unfinished here long ago.
Like I hadn’t arrived.
Like I had returned.
Some cities you visit.
Some cities remember you.
And somewhere between the station and that first real step, I understood that some journeys are not movements across maps.
They are movements across fate.


































