5/5 Adam W. 3 months ago on Google • 13 reviews New
A
really
interesting
small
museum
in
the
heart
of
London,
literally
adjacent
to
an
exit
to
Bank
tube
station
and
only
a
short
walk
from
the
main
exits
and
Cannon
Street
too.
The
museum
itself
isn't
huge,
with
a
small
display
of
all
the
many
artefacts
found
on
site.
There
were
captions
for
a
few
giving
some
insight
and
of
the
ones
labeled
they
were
all
very
interesting
-
however
that
was
9
out
of
probably
60
or
so.
There
were
tablets
next
to
this
which
may
have
had
more
detail
but
I
didn't
see
anyone
using
them
so
I
wasn't
sure.
You
then
descend
downstairs
into
a
waiting
room
with
a
couple
of
small
things
to
look
at.
There
are
some
projections
on
the
wall
and,
even
when
a
little
busy,
the
place
has
seating
and
a
nice
atmosphere.
You
can
view
the
temple
once
every
20
minutes
-
there
is
a
short
show
in
which
they
play
a
variety
of
sounds
and
use
light
to
make
you
feel
as
though
you
are
back
in
ancient
Roman
times,
before
the
lights
turn
on
and
you
can
see
the
temple
in
full.
It
is
very
small,
but
you
can
still
see
the
bases
of
the
columns,
the
shape
of
the
apses,
the
very
well-preserved
brickwork
at
the
far
end,
and
where
some
of
the
artefacts
may
have
been
found.
You
get
another
15
minutes
or
so
to
look
around
-
plenty
of
time
as
it
is
very
small,
before
you
are
ushered
back
to
the
waiting
room
and
can
look
more
around
the
rest.
The
20
minute
slots
help
keep
it
quite
empty
inside
the
temple,
and
as
it
isn't
a
busy
place
the
rest
is
quite
spacious
too.
All
in
all,
it's
a
very
interesting
little
place
-
allow
45
minutes
to
an
hour
to
see
it
all
and
use
the
nice
loos
-
down
some
winding
corridors
but
nice
and
very
clean.
I
wouldn't
travel
to
this
area
of
London
just
to
see
this
from
afar
-
if
you
go
then
have
a
look
at
other
things
in
the
area
too
to
make
it
worth
it.
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