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Trinity Buoy Wharf from the air

2 - Trinity Wharf, East India Docks, City Island

4.4 km · East London · Morning

Route Walkthrough
Route Details

Start Point:

End Point:

Distance:

Best Time

Difficulty:

Royal Victoria DLR Station

East India DLR Station

4.4 km

Morning

easy

Route Map

Detailed Guide

Get the full guide with Google and Strava Maps, a photo gallery and sight guide, areas to eat and drink, things to do, a virtual guide and ways to extend the route — everything you need whether you’re exploring at a walk or pushing the pace on a run.

Historical Sites & Landmarks
City Island

This modern development on a landscaped island between Canning Town and the Royal Docks transforms former industrial land into contemporary public spaces. Waterside gardens alongside Canning Town Canal and Leamouth Cut offer walking and cycling routes with sculpture installations. It's a relatively new addition providing pleasant green spaces and demonstrating ongoing Docklands regeneration beyond the commercial centres.

Virginia Settlers Monument

 This modest Blackwall memorial commemorates the 1606 departure of three ships—Susan Constant, Godspeed and Discovery—that established Jamestown, England's first permanent American colony. The monument recognises this pivotal moment when adventurers sailed from the Thames, fundamentally shaping transatlantic relations. It's a significant yet often overlooked piece of maritime and colonial history on London's riverside.

East India Basin and Nature Reserve

 This tranquil basin off the River Lea, part of the historic East India Docks system (opened 1806), now provides an unexpected wildlife haven. The surrounding nature reserve attracts waterfowl and wading birds amongst former industrial infrastructure. Peaceful waterside paths showcase how nature reclaims post-industrial spaces, offering striking contrasts between habitat and nearby development.

Orchard Dry Dock

 This preserved Victorian dry dock at Orchard Place once serviced ships using the busy Royal Docks, providing essential repairs to cargo vessels. The historic engineering structure now sits within modern residential development, creating striking architectural contrast. It's a fascinating reminder of the practical maritime infrastructure that underpinned East London's position as the world's busiest port.

Trinity Buoy Wharf

 This atmospheric former lighthouse engineering works on the Leamouth Peninsula once tested buoys and beacons for Trinity House. Now a creative quarter featuring Container City's stacked shipping container studios, London's only lighthouse (built 1864), and the Faraday Memorial housing a 1,000-year musical composition. Weekend markets and riverside café make it particularly rewarding to explore.

Victoria Dock

Opened in 1855 as the Royal Victoria Dock, this was the first of the Royal Docks and revolutionised cargo handling with steam cranes and direct rail connections. Over a kilometre long, it once handled tobacco, rubber and frozen meat from across the Empire. Now hosting water sports and festivals, it offers atmospheric waterside walks with ExCeL and City Airport views.

IFS Cloud Cable Car

Built for the 2012 Olympics as the Emirates Air Line, this cable car provides spectacular Thames crossings between Royal Docks and the O2 on Greenwich Peninsula. The ten-minute journey reaches 90 metres high, offering panoramic views across East London. It's both a practical transport and a genuine attraction—particularly memorable at sunset when London's skyline glows beneath you.

Things to Do Along the Route
English National Ballet – City Island

The English National Ballet's purpose-built headquarters opened here in 2019, bringing world-class ballet to East London for the first time. The striking contemporary building houses rehearsal studios, production facilities and company archives. Whilst primarily a working space, it represents significant cultural investment in the area and occasionally offers public performances and behind-the-scenes engagement opportunities.

IFS Cloud Cable Car

Built for the 2012 Olympics as the Emirates Air Line, this cable car provides spectacular Thames crossings between Royal Docks and the O2 on Greenwich Peninsula. The ten-minute journey reaches 90 metres high, offering panoramic views across East London. It's both a practical transport and a genuine attraction—particularly memorable at sunset when London's skyline glows beneath you.

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