London’s Blitz shelter tunnels to become a new tourist attraction

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A journalist stands, as members of the press are shown around underground tunnels used during World War Two as shelters during the Blitz that are now due to be developed into a new tourist attraction called The London Tunnels, in London, Britain, January 29, 2025. REUTERS/Chris J. Ratcliffe

The underground tunnels used during World War II as shelters during the Blitz are now due to be developed into a new tourist attraction called The London Tunnels.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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LONDON – Tunnels built to shelter Londoners during World War II bombing by Germany are set to be transformed into the British capital's biggest new tourist attraction for years, according to the company that has bought the sprawling network of passages.

The tunnels, which are 1.6km long and tall enough in parts to fit a double-decker bus, lie under Holborn in central London. They were dug by hand starting in late 1940, when German planes were bombing the city almost every day and night in what was known as the Blitz.

During the bombing raids, Londoners headed into underground train stations for safety. By 1942, when the purpose-built tunnels were finished, the Blitz had ceased so they were never used for shelter.

"It's real, it's emotional," says Mr Angus Murray, chief executive of The London Tunnels, standing in an arched steel cavern as London Underground trains rumbled overhead.

A former investment banker, Mr Murray hopes to turn the tunnels into a memorial to the Blitz, which he says will be part museum, part exhibition and part entertainment space.

The underground citadel is a maze of old generators, pipes and rusty bolts.

PHOTO: REUTERS

The tunnels housed spy headquarters in 1944, when James Bond author Ian Fleming worked in them for naval intelligence. The location is believed to have inspired Q Branch, where Bond goes to get his specialist equipment.

Thirty metres down, the underground citadel is a maze of old generators, pipes and rusty bolts. Bundles of wires dangle from the walls, which are dotted with dials, switches and levers.

The walls are dotted with dials, switches and levers. 

PHOTO: REUTERS

There are also the remains of a staff bar and canteen for the 200 people who worked in the tunnels in the 1950s and 1960s when it served as a telephone exchange.

Since the 1970s, the tunnel network has mostly stood empty.

Mr Murray estimates the plan to create a tourist attraction, which was approved by the authorities in 2024, will cost around £120 million (S$201.8 million). His company hopes up to three million people a year will pay over £30 to visit the space.

Since the 1970s, the tunnel network has mostly stood empty. 

PHOTO: REUTERS

He likens its expected impact on tourism to the London Eye observation wheel, which opened 25 years ago and attracts more than three million visitors annually.

The tunnels will be ready for the public by late 2027 or early 2028, Mr Murray says, adding they would be operated by an entertainment company familiar with running visitor attractions.

"In London, if one thing works, it's tourism," he said. REUTERS

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