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60 years of the shinkansen

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Five minutes before its scheduled departure at 6.16am, the Hokuriku Shinkansen pulls into Tokyo Station — with absolutely no right to look this good so early in the morning. The rising sun, splintered by a hundred office windows, dances on the blue and gold of the train’s arcing, aquiline nose cone. The carriages, gleaming in pearl white and shaped by the man who designed the Ferrari Enzo, come to a millimetre-accurate stop at the platform gates. Doors slide apart to the welcome of soft reclining seats, inviting you to sit down, open a perfect egg sandwich bought on the platform, and enjoy it at 260km/h. 

On Tuesday, Japan will celebrate the 60th anniversary of the first bullet train’s inaugural journey. It’s also three decades since my first shinkansen experience but 10 minutes into my trip from Tokyo to Nagano it all still feels a bit like cheating. There’s a nagging sense that I am exploiting the obsessiveness and largesse of a benevolent maniac. Japan, in its glorious, gadgety folly, has decided it must have this extraordinary thing, and it’s joyously ours not to reason why. It really shouldn’t be possible, for less than £42, to travel 200km into the mountains in this style, in a vehicle of this exquisite grace, at this speed, at this smoothness, in a system this supernaturally efficient and with so very little fuss.

The stylish and elongated nose cones of two trains sit side by side at a rail station
Two sleek E7 series bullet trains on the Hokuriku Shinkansen line in Nagano © winhorse

The train leaves central Tokyo. Then slips out of its immense suburban splurge with a progression of views that cannot ever tire because of how constantly Japan’s architecture is built, torn down and renewed. Look, and you will always see something new. After Oomiya, in northern Saitama prefecture, the tunnels that make all this straight-line speed possible begin to carve their way into ever longer stretches of mountain. 

Nap of Japan showing the Tokaido Shinkansen and Hokuriku Shinkansen routes

For all the external hurtle, the interior is calm. People are talking, but are doing so at a volume calibrated to minimise any bother to other passengers. A young woman in a suit breaks away from her companion to take a mobile call in the corridor. A few years ago, some bullet train operators started talking about the need for “office carriages” so that business passengers could type away on laptops without the appalling din of the keystrokes disturbing neighbours. My coffee barely ripples as the train slices into the darkness of the mountains, and I drift into a traveller’s doze.


I have chosen the short Tokyo to Nagano journey for both practical and emotional reasons. At 8am, I am meeting the manager of a venture capital fund who decided, even before the pandemic made this sort of relocation more common, to swap the throb of Tokyo for mountain air, a long skiing season and the proximity of the world’s finest miso factories.

A train speeds along a viaduct above a city street
A bullet train running through Tokyo in 1964, the first year of operation © The Asahi Shimbun via Getty Images
A train gliding along tracks
A shinkansen train in Shizuoka, 1964 © The Asahi Shimbun via Getty Images
Multiple rows of three-wide train seats in the interior of a train carriage
Inside a standard class carriage in the first bullet train model © The Asahi Shimbun via Getty Images

The shinkansen, playing the facilitating role it does — and always has — for so much of Japan, made his move perfectly reasonable. If he suddenly needs to be 200km away in Tokyo for something urgent, there is reliably a high-speed train every half-hour that will take him there in a little over 70 minutes.

Equally, the shinkansen’s most impressive magic is that my punctual, pre-breakfast skim to Nagano barely feels noteworthy. Japan has gone for an image of nonchalant supremacy in its high-speed trains, and succeeded spectacularly. The 6:16am train is busy, but not crammed, with business folk and foreign tourists. It is mainly populated, though, by that huge hinterland of Japanese conditioned to see high-frequency, high-speed rail as something close to a human right, relishing their station-bought bento boxes and on the move this morning for a million unguessable reasons.

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But the other cause for choosing this particular journey to celebrate the anniversary of the bullet train is my own history with it. The Tokyo to Osaka line — the route that launched the concept on the world and crystallised Japan’s sense of its postwar self — opened in 1964, just ahead of the equally nation-defining Olympic Games in Tokyo that same year.

The modern histories of Japan, which I devoured so hungrily as a student in the 1990s, rightly made a very great deal about this pair of events: a powerfully alluring explanatory duo whose shining moment as symbols of Japan’s great postwar resurrection happened, annoyingly, well before I was born. 

But in 1998, now fighting the suspicion that it was squelching irretrievably in the mire of an economic “lost decade”, Japan took another shot at glory: the Winter Olympics in Nagano and, to complete the historic echo, a newly opened bullet train that would eventually connect the capital with the host city. I travelled on this train (at the time only running between Takasaki and Nagano) early that year, eager to ride the newest line and see the preparations for the Games: a participant, at last, in a piece of living Japanese history.

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Some 26 years later, this much longer Hokuriku line — now extended into a great sweeping semi-circle that rises from Tokyo up to the Sea of Japan and then along its coast, is still in the news. A new extension, at its far western end, opened this year and adds the town of Tsuruga to the route. Grand plans for the future — and we are talking decades of proposed construction here — will see the route extended still further down to Osaka.

In 1964, the first shinkansen ran at up to 210km/h, on 550km of high-speed track. Today the network has extended to cover almost 3,000km and the fastest train, the long-nosed metallic green Hayabusa, reaches 320km/h.

A train with a heavily elongated turquoise-coloured nose cone in a train station
An E5 series shinkansen built by Hitachi and Kawasaki Heavy Industries, at Tokyo Station. Operating Hayabusa services, it runs at up to 320km/h © Zuma Press/Eyevine

The long-termedness of the vision, when you look at the current and future shinkansen routes overlaid on a map of Japan’s central island of Honshu, is astonishing. By the middle of the century, according to this blueprint, Japan will effectively have a shinkansen “circle line” running over 1,500km in a mighty loop of high-speed rail: west out of Tokyo to Kyoto and Osaka, north to Nagano and Kanazawa, but eventually joined. 

And it takes something much more than a large budget, cheap debt and fierce ambition to want to do this. In its 60 years of service, the shinkansen has allowed Japan the conviction — often in the face of economic stagnation and decline — that it is fundamentally still a “can do” culture. Tourists may be arriving and using the train in their millions but Japan’s native population is shrinking, ageing and, as the ratio of over-65s nears 30 per cent, becoming less mobile. The geography of its economy is contracting too as the younger population gravitates towards the larger cities and business closures fall heaviest on small rural towns. Logically, these megaprojects should be in decline.

But for all its intensely practical importance as a connector of industrial centres and an arch logistician of human movement, the shinkansen continues to play a role as an ideological encapsulator of Japan’s sense of what it is and what it should ideally strive to be. There has never been a fatal accident. Average annual lateness across the JR Central network is 1.6 minutes. When the natural world forces the shinkansen to stop, you know conditions are genuinely bad.

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The shinkansen has achieved that in a couple of important ways. The first is that, despite the appearance of effortless perfection of service, punctuality and performance, Japan knows full well that everything is, in fact, attributable to unstinting effort. It is no coincidence that, in the same year it opened the shinkansen, Japan Railways invented an alarm clock for its staff which could not, under any circumstances, be slept through (thanks to an inflatable balloon under the mattress).

A train passes in front of a snow-capped mountain
Speeding by Mount Fuji © Alamy
People standing in front of a field of sunflowers hold up their cameras to take photos of a yellow train speeding by on a bridge
Enthusiasts take photos of a ‘Doctor Yellow’ track-testing train in Ogaki, Gifu prefecture, August 2024 © Alamy
A yellow train passes through a station
The high-speed diagnostic trains monitor the condition of the track and overhead wires © Flickr Editorial/Getty Images

A second key factor is in the remarkable power of the bullet train to geekify almost anyone. Japanese are, by reputation, susceptible to this. But the truth is that we all are, in the face of industrial artistry on this scale. You can legitimately claim not to be interested in the technical details of the Kawasaki Heavy W series train, and may, indeed, not care about its advantages over the E Series. But a first close-up encounter with a shinkansen gliding into Tokyo Station; a first glimpse of Mount Fuji from the window of the Nozomi as the rice fields in the foreground blur; that gentle ear-pop as you fly from a tunnel while buying an ice cream from the snacks trolley — this is how geeks are made.

I am awake again 15 minutes before Nagano, entranced once more by the suddenness with which Japan becomes alpine. We alight to a different temperature, a different smell and, in a true gauge of the distance travelled, a different drinks selection in the vending machines. The shinkansen — more so than any other form of transport and by dint mainly of how stupendously easy Japan has made it to access — is the closest we will ever come to a teleportation machine.

Leo Lewis is the FT’s Tokyo bureau chief

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‘I thought this was a massive bargain!’ hails mum over Barbie toy set with £70 slashed off price ‘perfect for Christmas’

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'I thought this was a massive bargain!' hails mum over Barbie toy set with £70 slashed off price 'perfect for Christmas'

ONE mum has hailed a Barbie set she says is a “massive bargain” as £70 has been slashed off the price just in time for Christmas.

Toy company Maqio is holding a huge sale on the world-famous doll and has slashed prices.

One mum has said a Barbie set from Maqio is a 'massive bargain'

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One mum has said a Barbie set from Maqio is a ‘massive bargain’Credit: Facebook
The set includes a pink car

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The set includes a pink carCredit: Facebook

One mum has bought a set discounted by £70 and squirrelling it away until Christmas for her daughter.

The set includes a pink car and a wardrobe so Barbie and Ken can go on amazing adventures together.

The price for the set, which is sure to excite any Barbie-loving child, has been slashed from £119.99 to £49.99 on the company’s website.

Mum Kelly said: “Ordered this for my daughter for Christmas and I can tell you she’s going to be extremely happy!

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“I mean the box it’s come in is absolutely huge!

“I thought this was a massive bargain.”

Maqio describes the set saying Barbie and Ken are “always on the go, with a closet and convertible, they can move in minutes.”

They say: “Open the translucent doors of the pink closet to discover storage space and an extendable garment rack with two hangers.

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“Plus, the handle on top makes it easy to take on the go!

“Barbie and Ken dolls wear trendy outfits for versatile storytelling so kids can hit the road right away.”

Mattel launches the first blind Barbie doll

The wheels roll and the seat belts even keep the dolls in place in the two seater convertible.

The sale comes a couple of months after the first blind ­Barbie was unveiled — complete with a white and red cane, sunglasses and ­tactile clothing.

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Makers Mattel were advised by the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) to ensure the doll’s design was “authentic”.

The charity says her up-and-out facing eyes “reflect the sometimes-distinct eye gaze of a blind individual” and the cane has an identifiable marshmallow tip.

I’m a Barbie expert – the 10 most valuable dolls worth up to £8,000, exact features to look for

THE Barbie movie reignited a love for the famous doll – but are your old toys collecting dust in the attic worth a fortune?

The film starring Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling hit theatres last year.

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Old Barbies can command high prices for collectors. So how do you know if you’re sitting on a goldmine?

“Barbie dolls that are part of limited edition or special edition collections tend to have a high value,” doll and toy expert Simon Farnworth told The Sun.

He’s been collecting Barbies since the late 90s and runs Simon’s Collectibles (dollstoysngifts.co.uk), an online shop for adult toy and doll collectors.

Simon added: “These dolls often feature unique designs, are collaborations with celebrities, or commemorate significant events – for example, the 2019 Gold label Ziggy Stardust themed David Bowie Barbie, which originally sold for around £50, can command over £300 now.”

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Barbie collaborations with renowned fashion designers and brands – such as Christian DiorVersace, or Vera Wang – are also highly sought after by collectors.

“A recent example of this is the recent collaboration between Barbie and artist Mark Ryden, released exclusively on the Barbie Creations website last year,” he said.

“The Pink Pop Barbie Mark Ryden x Barbie Doll has already doubled in value.”

Vintage Barbie dolls – made between 1959 and 1972 – can fetch eye-watering prices.

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Barbie is a world-famous doll

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Barbie is a world-famous doll

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Travel

Wizz Air Airbus 320 & 321 seating plans: How to get the best seats with this flight map & the ones to avoid

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Wizz Air have won the award for the 'Most Sustainable Low-Cost Airline' four years in a row

IF you’re looking to whizz off aboard a Wizz Air flight this summer then you’ll be wanting to select the best seats without any extra cost.

Book wisely using our guide to secure you and your family the best seats aboard the Wizz Air Airbus 320 and 321 aircraft.

Wizz Air have won the award for the 'Most Sustainable Low-Cost Airline' four years in a row

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Wizz Air have won the award for the ‘Most Sustainable Low-Cost Airline’ four years in a rowCredit: GETTY
Here is a seating guide for Wizz Air Airbus 320 based on SeatGuru seating plan

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Here is a seating guide for Wizz Air Airbus 320 based on SeatGuru seating plan

Wizz Air have been dubbed the ‘most sustainable low-cost airline’ four years in a row, but what can passengers expect from their experience aboard the Airbus Airbus 320 and 321.

The budget airline celebrated the arrival of the GTF-powered Airbus Airbus 320 aircraft to its fleet of 153 aircraft in 2022. 

Both the Airbus 320 and 321 operate in short-haul flights with Wizz Air offering snacks and beverages for purchase on most of their flights.

Although the two aircrafts look almost identical, their size and seating plan vary.

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The Airbus 320 offers 180 seats, whereas the Airbus 321 is larger, offering 230 seats in comparison.

Your holiday begins the minute you board the plane, so why not make your journey as comfortable as possible by using the SunTravel seating guide map.

Extra leg room

If you’re tall or like to spread out on a flight, then it will be the extra leg room you’re after.

There are specific economy seats that provide the space you need – you just have to know where they are.

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According to the flight map for both the Wizz Air Airbus 320 & 321 the seats with extra leg are as follows:

Passengers needing the extra space on either aircraft should opt for any seat between A – F on row 1.

Incredible moment Airbus barely misses beachgoers as it makes ‘lowest ever landing’ at island airport

Row 1 seats tend to get booked up fast but there’s plenty more to choose from.

If your aircraft is the Wizz Airbus 320, any seat between A – F on row 13 will provide the extra leg room you need.

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Seats A – F on row 12 also offer extra leg room, but these particular seats do not recline.

Here is a seating guide for Wizz Air Airbus 321 based on SeatGuru seating plan

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Here is a seating guide for Wizz Air Airbus 321 based on SeatGuru seating planCredit: The Sun

If you find yourself allocated a flight onboard the Wizz Airbus 321 then seats B,C,D and E on row 12, and seats A,B,C and F on row 26 will provide extra leg room.

Row 10 also offer extra leg room in seats A – E, but do bare in mind these particular seats have a limited recline which could make napping quite uncomfortable.

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Seats to avoid

If your first choice of seats are booked, then your next best bet is to know which seats to avoid.

Onboard the Wizz Airbus 320 passengers should avoid seat A – F on Row 30 – due to their close proximity to the toilets and the cabin -you’re likely to be disturbed throughout your flight.

The seats may also have limited recline for the same reason, and there is no window on the last row of the plane.

It’s also worth noting there is no window available in seats A and F of Row 20.

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Onboard the Wizz Airbus 321 passengers should avoid seat A – F on row 39 as your seats will have no recline, and you’re likely to be disturbed by passengers getting up to use the toilet closeby.

Seat A and F on row 26 have legroom but no window.

Best views

Being situated by the wing of the aircraft guarantees the best skyline snaps.

For the best views onboard the Airbus 321 passengers are urged to book seat A or F on row 10.

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And if you’re onboard the Airbus 320, seat A and F on row 9 are the seats to look out for.

If you want first dibs on snacks chose a seat at the front or the back of an aircraft

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If you want first dibs on snacks chose a seat at the front or the back of an aircraftCredit: GETTY

Head start on snacks

If you want to be among one of the first passengers to be served refreshments then it’s best to book a seat in either the first two rows or the last two near the back of the plane.

Seat A – F on row 1 or row 30 on the Airbus 320 will get you first dibs on snacks.

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With trolley carts circulating from both the front and the back of the aircraft, these seats are your best bet but the downside you’re likely to be disturbed by other passengers using the toilets.

Similarly, for the Airbus 321 any seat on row 1 and 39 will mean you’re close to the gallery where snacks are prepared.

Take a nap

If passengers find themselves on an overnight flight you might like to get some sleep.

Window seats give passengers the best chance at having an uninterrupted snooze.

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This is because other passengers won’t need to ask you to move when they take a trip to the toilet.

Check The Sun’s flight map to see where all the window seats are located on both aircrafts.

Getting off the plane first

If you hate waiting around and you’re keen to start your holiday then beat the queues by booking a seat in the front five rows of both the Airbus Wizz 320 and 321.

Failing that, you’re guaranteed to get off the plane quicker by simply booking an aisle seat, because you’ll have a head start at finding your hand luggage.

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Flight compensation rules

A look at your rights if a flight is delayed or cancelled, when your entitled to compensation and if your travel insurance can cover the costs.

What are my rights if my flight is cancelled or delayed?

Under UK law, airlines have to provide compensation if your flight arrives at its destination more than three hours late.

If you’re flying to or from the UK, your airline must let you choose a refund or an alternative flight.

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You will be able to get your money back for the part of your ticket that you haven’t used yet.

So if you booked a return flight and the outbound leg is cancelled, you can get the full cost of the return ticket refunded.

But if travelling is essential, then your airline has to find you an alternative flight. This could even be with another airline.

When am I not entitled to compensation?

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The airline doesn’t have to give you a refund if the flight was cancelled due to reasons beyond their control, such as extreme weather.

Disruptions caused by things like extreme weather, airport or air traffic control employee strikes or other ‘extraordinary circumstances’ are not eligible for compensation.

Some airlines may stretch the definition of “extraordinary circumstances” but you can challenge them through the aviation regulator the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA).

Will my insurance cover me if my flight is cancelled?

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If you can’t claim compensation directly through the airline, your travel insurance may refund you.

Policies vary so you should check the small print, but a delay of eight to 12 hours will normally mean you qualify for some money from your insurer.

Remember to get written confirmation of your delay from the airport as your insurer will need proof.

If your flight is cancelled entirely, you’re unlikely to be covered by your insurance.

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Beach hut the same size as a garden shed at just 6ft wide and cannot even be slept in on sale for £110,000​

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Beach hut the same size as a garden shed at just 6ft wide and cannot even be slept in on sale for £110,000​

A BEACH hut that’s the same size as a garden shed and cannot even be slept in has been put on the market for a whopping £110,000.

The wooden cabin located at Avon Beach in Christchurch, Dorset would not look out of place in a suburban back garden.

The hut is one of many on Avon Beach

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The hut is one of many on Avon BeachCredit: BNPS
Inside you can find a kitchenette and seating

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Inside you can find a kitchenette and seatingCredit: BNPS
Owner Paul Heydon bought the property in 2021 after spotting it was for sale while on a beach walk

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Owner Paul Heydon bought the property in 2021 after spotting it was for sale while on a beach walkCredit: BNPS

The 6ft wide by 13ft long hut got its six figure price tag due to its desirable beachside location.

Owner Paul Heydon bought it in 2021 after spotting it was for sale while on a beach walk.

After three years enjoying it he has decided to sell up as he has bought a bigger hut at a different beach.

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The beach hut, which cannot be slept in, has secondary glass doors, meaning it can be used in the winter.

Inside there is a kitchenette with a fridge and hob powered by a gas bottle and sink and storage space for food, drink, crockery and beach-related items.

It is just yards from the beach and has panoramic views of the Isle of Wight.

Avon Beach has 130 huts along the quiet sandy beach, which is popular with dog walkers, tourists and water sports enthusiasts.

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Owners have to pay ground rent of about £1,100 a year.

In the past, hardy staycationers have queued for up to 30 hours in the cold and rain in January to rent a hut at Avon Beach for the summer season.

People take sleeping bags and other home comforts to brave the elements to guarantee a booking.

Beach hut on sale for nearly half a MILLION pounds – but it comes with a very big catch

Mr Heydon, 57, a semi-retired tech investor, said: “We had just bought a property in the New Forest and we were walking along Avon Beach one day and saw it was up for sale and decided to buy it.

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“We have used it quite regularly, probably once every two weeks, but we have bought a bigger hut now at Barton-on-Sea so we haven’t been using it as much.

“Avon is a really nice beach and generally quiet – you get lots of people walking there but there’s not lots of parties or anything like that.

“You have the Noisy Lobster restaurant and shop close by and there’s plenty of walks in either direction.

“There’s about 100 huts at Avon Beach and they don’t come up for sale all that often.

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“We have just enjoyed it ourselves and used it to make going to the beach easier without having to carry stuff every time but people could view it as a property, a long term investment and you can rent them out and make an income.”

If you’re interested in buying Hut 93, you can contact Mr Heydon through beachhuts.com.

The hut with its doors wide open

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The hut with its doors wide openCredit: BNPS
The view looking out of the front door of the shed

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The view looking out of the front door of the shedCredit: BNPS
Owner Paul with the beachside cabin

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Owner Paul with the beachside cabinCredit: BNPS

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England’s best completely free attractions revealed – from 500ft-high garden to the ‘world’s greatest museum’

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Sky Garden is 500ft above the City of London

AS the cost-of-living crisis continues, families may be looking for a fun day out that won’t break the bank.

TripAdvisor has revealed its top attractions to visit in England completely free of charge – and it ranges from a 500ft-high garden to the so-called “museum of the world”.

Natural History Museum

Science and natural history enthusiasts should look no further than the Natural History Museum.

Its dinosaur specimens and replicas are world-famous – and include part of the first Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton ever discovered.

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The building, in South Kensington, London, is one of the city’s most spectacular attractions in itself.

Although some exhibitions may have an entry fee, general admission to the museum is completely free.

Sky Garden

London’s highest public garden, Sky Garden, is perched at the top of a skyscraper in the heart of the city.

On the 43rd floor of the Fenchurch Building in east London, the garden offers panoramic views of the capital from a height of over 500ft.

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Sky Garden is 500ft above the City of London

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Sky Garden is 500ft above the City of LondonCredit: Alamy

As well as the iconic glass-domed landscape gardens, it’s got observation decks and an open-air terrace.

And, if you’re willing to part with a little cash, you can even enjoy a drink or meal at one of the bars or restaurants.

Make sure to book a slot in advance to enjoy this free attraction.

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The British Museum

The British Museum has one of the largest collections in the world – of eight million works – and it’s totally free to access.

The museum is 271 years old and located in Bloomsbury, London.

2E04KNC The British Museum, The Great Court, London, England.

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2E04KNC The British Museum, The Great Court, London, England.Credit: Alamy

With relics dating back 1.8 million years, it’s the perfect historical day out for families.

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Plus, it is set to have a huge multi-million-pound makeover soon.

The museum is a hit with visitors, with nearly 54,000 five star reviews on TripAdvisor.

The Shambles

The Shambles is a historic street in York city centre, dating back to the medieval times.

It was once a street of butchers shops – and you can still find many original 14th century buildings there.

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It is Europe‘s most visited street.

It’s just a twenty-minute walk from York Station and can be explored completely for free.

Victoria and Albert Museum

The V&A is the world’s biggest museum of art and design, founded by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert in 1852.

It’s located in Kensington, London, and houses exhibitions for all ages.

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The V&A was founded by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert

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The V&A was founded by Queen Victoria and Prince AlbertCredit: Alamy

From July to September, it ran a Taylor Swift exhibition, complete with 13 iconic costumes donated by the singer.

It is entirely admission free.

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Labour MP Rosie Duffield quits party and hits out at Starmer over donations

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Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Labour MP Rosie Duffield is quitting the party over Sir Keir Starmer’s acceptance of free gifts and his “cruel” policies such as cutting the winter fuel allowance.

The MP for Canterbury, who was elected in 2017, has long been at odds with Starmer’s leadership, particularly on issues of sex and gender — but her voluntary departure less than three months after the general election is thought to be the swiftest in British political history.

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On Saturday evening the 53-year old published a letter accusing the Labour prime minister of “staggering and increasingly outrageous” hypocrisy. 

Labour has been engulfed in a row about the acceptance by Starmer and other senior ministers of freebies including tens of thousands of pounds of clothing from Lord Alli, a Labour peer. 

“The sleaze, nepotism and apparent avarice are off the scale. I am so ashamed of what you and your inner circle have done to tarnish and humiliate our once-proud party,” Duffield wrote.

“Someone with far-above-average wealth choosing to keep the Conservatives’ two-child limit to benefit payments which entrenches children in poverty, while inexplicably accepting expensive personal gifts of designer suits and glasses costing more than most of those people can grasp — this is entirely undeserving of holding the title of Labour prime minister.”

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Duffield asked Starmer why he was not showing “even the slightest bit of embarrassment” about accepting free family trips to events while cutting the winter fuel allowance. 

Rachel Reeves, chancellor of the exchequer, is planning to restrict the allowance to old people receiving pension credit in order to save about £1.4bn for the exchequer as part of her efforts to improve the nation’s finances. 

But the move has been widely criticised by charities, trade unions and some Labour backbench MPs. Delegates at the party’s annual conference in Liverpool this week backed a motion calling for it to be reversed. 

Duffield said she hoped one day to return to the Labour party, which had always been her natural political home as a single mother, union member and former teaching assistant in receipt of tax credits. 

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But she said her constituents wanted an independent-minded MP who would put constituency before party and therefore she hoped to continue to represent the seat. 

Duffield has previously spoken out about feeling unsupported by the Labour leadership over her views on trans issues, including her belief that people who are biologically male should not enter some protected spaces, such as domestic violence refuges. 

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Energy firms giving away free £150 this winter to help with bills – is your supplier on the list?

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Energy firms giving away free £150 this winter to help with bills - is your supplier on the list?

YOU may be eligible to get a free £150 to help with your energy bills this winter.

A number of energy suppliers will be giving the discount on bills for struggling households this winter.

The scheme aims to provide relief for the most vulnerable households

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The scheme aims to provide relief for the most vulnerable householdsCredit: Getty
It consists of a direct £150 credit to your account with your energy supplier

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It consists of a direct £150 credit to your account with your energy supplierCredit: Getty

The help is being provided via the Government’s Warm Home Discount scheme.

The package sees energy suppliers give a £150 discount on the electricity bills of people claiming certain benefits from the Department for Work and Pensions.

The support is not awarded as cash into your bank account but instead applied directly to your account by your energy supplier.

The credit you have in your energy account will increase by £150 so it can only be used on your energy bills.

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If you have a traditional prepay meter, you will instead be sent a voucher which you can use to top up the meter in your home.

The support is given automatically to people claiming certain benefits including:

  • Income related Employment and Support Allowance (ESA)
  • Income based Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA)
  • Income Support
  • Universal Credit
  • Housing benefit
  • Child Tax Credits and Working Tax Credits
  • Pension Credit Savings Credit (PCSC)

To get the money this year, you will need to be claiming these benefits during the qualifying week.

This is usually in August, however the official week has not yet been confirmed.

The Warm Home Discount scheme will reopen in October and it is likely we will get an update then.

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It’s also important to know that not all energy suppliers are part of the scheme.

So even if you are claiming the eligible benefits, you may not receive the help.

Which suppliers participate in the Warm Home Discount scheme?

According to GOV.UK, the following suppliers took part in last year’s Warm Home Discount scheme. This means it is likely they will be a part of this year’s too – although this has not been confirmed.

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  • 100Green (formerly Green Energy UK or GEUK)
  • Affect Energy
  • Atlantic
  • Boost
  • British Gas
  • Bulb Energy
  • Co-op Energy
  • E
  • Ecotricity
  • E.ON Next
  • EDF
  • Good Energy
  • London Power
  • Octopus Energy
  • Outfox the Market
  • OVO
  • Rebel Energy
  • Sainsbury’s Energy
  • Scottish Gas
  • Scottish Hydro
  • ScottishPower
  • Shell Energy Retail
  • So Energy
  • Southern Electric
  • SSE Energy Services
  • Swalec
  • Tomato Energy
  • TruEnergy
  • Utilita
  • Utility Warehouse

If your energy supplier is part of the scheme, they should contact you to let you know whether you are eligible, these letters usually come before January the next year.

The scheme opens in October and runs until March each year so your discount can be applied anytime.

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