For cheap car hire at London City Airport, simply enter your required dates in the search tool below. Together with CarRentals.co.uk, our airport car hire search partner, we compare the prices of London City Airport car hire and rentals from over 50 of the UK’s top car hire companies, allowing you to book directly with them, ensuring you get the best deal on discount airport car hire.
 






 
 
London has something for everyone. Its museum and galleries are packed with a dazzling variety of man-made and natural objects that span the history of the earth from its creation to the present day.
 
It has buildings of every type and age, interspersed by thousands of acres of beautiful parks. Its theaters, restaurants and shops are among the finest anywhere, and its great pageants and state occasions are unique.
 
Of London’s nine royal parks, five are set in the heart of the capital, and all of of these have distinctive characters enhanced by their position in the centre of one of the world’s busiest and most crowed cities.
 
With the towers and pinnacles of Westminster at its eastern end, and the dignified bulk of Buckingham Palace at the other, St James’s is perhaps the best known and best loved of the central parks. Grassy areas dotted with clumps of trees and lovely flower beds surround a lake which is home to many kinds of water birds. Green Park, across the Mall from St James’s is principally a place of stately avenues of trees among grass that is enlivened by thousands of flowering bulbs in spring. Hyde Park is separated from Green Park only by the infamous road junction called Hyde Park Corner. Its most outstanding feature is the stretch of water called the Serpentine, but it gains its unique character from its feeling of great space and freedom. Kensington Gardens are separated from Hyde Park by an even thinner strip of tarmac, but once more the change in character is marked.
 
Kensington Park has a more enclosed and intimate feeling than Hyde Park, with which it shares the Serpentine, although here it is called the Long Water. Set away from the other four parks is Regent’s, which if Primrose Hill is included in its area, covers 870 acres. It was given its present appearance in the early 19th century by the great architect John Nash, whose elegant spaciousness echoes the Regency houses that surround it.