London City Guide

Mansion House – Lord Mayor of London's home

Mansion House
Where?
Mansion House, Bank Junction, The City · Web: cityoflondon.gov.uk
Opening times?
Closed to the public except during guided tours
Time required?
A typical visit is 2 PM to 3.30 PM
Parking:
Nearby car parks
Buses:
8, 11, 21, 23, 25, 26, 43, 47, 48, 76, 133, 141, 149, 242
Bus fares
Trains:
The closest station is Bank Central DLR Northern Wat&City
Other nearby stations: Cannon Street, Mansion House, Monument and Moorgate
Train fares

’s review… Mansion House is where the Lord Mayor of London lives so you’d think the security might be tight, but the guard just seemed to stuff our bags through the scanner and wave us through. I had my camera, phone, money and keys, guns, knives and bazooka with me, and the X-ray machine didn’t make a peep. Once you’re through the security (*cough cough*) you have to stand around in a little cloakroom for ten minutes looking at the marble busts of long dead Mayors.

The tour begins in the entrance hall where the guide launches into a very wordy speech which rattles along at steam train pace for the next sixty minutes. Not a lot of people know the history of the Guilds so most of the facts he fires at you are brand new but like a scattergun they come, rat-a-tat-tat, from Magna Carta all the way up to the present day. He covers the building, its history, the aldermen, the art and architects, before finally moving on to the Lord Mayor himself explaining what his role is, and how he came to be elected.

The Lord Mayor of London

Everyone thinks that the Lord Mayor of London is the same guy that operates out of City Hall, but he’s the Mayor of London (Greater London) whereas the Lord Mayor looks after the Square Mile. The Lord Mayor only holds onto his job for twelve months and then he gets booted out so someone else can have a go (if only we had the same rule for our Prime Ministers!), but he does get to live inside Mansion House for that entire time, which is some perk.

State Rooms & Egyptian Hall

Unfortunately you don’t get to see his private apartments upstairs, it’s strictly about the State Rooms. And he only takes you into five of them – but two of them are absolute stunners. You might have seen one of them on the telly already because the Egyptian Hall is where the Chancellor gives his annual address to the City bankers. It’s three storeys tall with a line of Corinthian columns down the side and a minstrel’s gallery running around the top. Marble statues of mythical gods look down from the alcoves and the stained-glass windows tell the history of the City. It’s an amazing space and one of the best rooms in London.

After that comes the boardroom with its collection of Dutch landscapes and dusty old portraits of the Aldermen.

The tour lasted for one hour exactly… but it was a very long hour because most of that was spent standing on the spot listening to the guide talking about the paintings and plasterwork.

Worth a visit? Value for money? Good for kids? Easy to get to?

I also recommend… If you enjoy this then try Guildhall (you can walk it in 4 mins) and Royal Courts of Justice (walk it in 22 mins or travel from Bank to Temple by tube). Mansion House is in the heart of The City, just over the road from the Bank of England and Royal Exchange

London Squire bookThe author owns city-guide.london and has spent the last decade reviewing the capital’s landmarks, attractions and hotels. His guidebook is available from Amazon

Your comments and questions

Tom This is a beautiful building, both inside and out, and it's a shame they don't open it up to the public more often because it's beautiful inside.

Tony L I was lucky enough to attend a dinner here a few years ago