👍 I like it Skip

Lower Leas Coastal Park

Lower Leas Coastal Park is in Folkestone, in Kent, England. The park is split into three broad recreational zones, starting at The Leas Lift (on Lower Sandgate Road) and heading west.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 1006
👍 I like it Skip

Kent Battle of Britain Museum

The Kent Battle of Britain Museum is an aviation museum located in Hawkinge, Kent, focused on the Battle of Britain.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 726
👍 I like it Skip

The Leas Lift

The Leas Lift is a grade II* listed funicular railway that carries passengers between the seafront and the promenade in Folkestone, Kent. Originally installed in 1885, it is one of the oldest water lifts in the UK.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 495
👍 I like it Skip

Samphire Hoe

Samphire Hoe is a country park situated 2 miles (3 km) west of Dover in Kent in southeast England. The park was created by using 4.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 385
👍 I like it Skip

Fan Bay Deep Shelter

Fan Bay Deep Shelter is a series of tunnels constructed during World War II as accommodation for Fan Bay Battery artillery battery, 23 metres down in the White Cliffs of Dover at Fan Bay near the Port of Dover. The tunnels and gun battery were built by the Royal Engineers between 20 November 1940 and 28 February 1941.

Rating 5
Reviews 284
👍 I like it Skip

Brockhill Country Park

Brockhill Country Park is in Saltwood, near Hythe in Kent, England. The park was a former estate with landscaped gardens and has subsequently been sub-divided.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 195
👍 I like it Skip

Leas Cliff Hall

Leas Cliff Hall is an entertainment and function venue situated in Folkestone, on the Kent coast of England. The Grand Hall seats 900 and it has a standing capacity of 1500.

Rating 4
Reviews 160
👍 I like it Skip

Western Heights

Western Heights is a 51. 7-hectare (128-acre) Local Nature Reserve in Dover in Kent.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 110
👍 I like it Skip

Folkestone Harbour Arm

Folkestone Harbour is the main harbour of the town of Folkestone in Kent, England.

Rating 4
Reviews 93
👍 I like it Skip

East Cliff and Warren Country Park

East Cliff and Warren Country Park is in Folkestone, in Kent, England. This country park is formed of the East Cliffs of Folkestone, the sandy beaches of East Wear Bay and the land-slipped nature reserve land between the cliffs and the sea.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 93
👍 I like it Skip

Dover Priory Railway Station

Dover Priory railway station is the southern terminus of the South Eastern Main Line in England, and is the main station serving the town of Dover, Kent, the other open station being Kearsney, on the outskirts. It is 77 miles 26 chains (124.

Rating 4
Reviews 90
👍 I like it Skip

St Mary's Church

The Church of St Mary the Virgin is a Grade II* listed Anglican church, a parish church in Dover, Kent, and is situated on Cannon Street in the town centre. There was a church on this site in Saxon times.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 51
👍 I like it Skip

The Tower Theatre Folkestone

The Tower Theatre is a theatre in Folkestone, Kent that has been converted from the garrison church of Shorncliffe Camp barracks. The venue is owned by Folkestone & Hythe Operatic & Dramatic Society, (FHODS).

Rating 4.5
Reviews 36
👍 I like it Skip

Saltwood Castle

Saltwood Castle is a castle in Saltwood village, one mile (2 km) north of Hythe, Kent, England. Of 11th century origin, the castle was expanded in the 13th and 14th centuries.

Rating 4
Reviews 17
👍 I like it Skip

Folkestone Racecourse

Folkestone Racecourse was a thoroughbred horse racing venue in southeast England, until it closed in 2012. It is located in Westenhanger, by junction 11 of the M20 motorway and about two miles west of Folkestone.

Rating 3.5
Reviews 15
👍 I like it Skip

St Edmund's Chapel

St Edmund's Chapel is a church in Dover, England, dedicated to St Edmund. It was completed in 1262 as a wayside chapel or chapel of rest for the cemetery for the poor beside the Maison Dieu, just outside the enclosed part of the medieval town, a short distance above Biggin Gate, and for pilgrims setting off for Thomas Becket's shrine at Canterbury Cathedral.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 12
👍 I like it Skip

St Martin's Church

St Martin's Church is an Anglican church in the village and parish of Acrise in Kent, England. The church dates back to the Norman era, and was designated a Grade I listed building in 1966.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 6
👍 I like it Skip

Knights Templar Church

The Knights Templar Church in Dover is the ruins of a medieval church on Bredenstone hill, part of the Dover Western Heights in Kent, England. It has been designated by English Heritage as a scheduled monument.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 5
👍 I like it Skip

Fort Burgoyne

Fort Burgoyne, originally known as Castle Hill Fort, was built in the 1860s as one of the Palmerston forts around Dover in southeast England. It was built to a polygonal system with detached eastern and western redoubts, to guard the high ground northeast of the strategic port of Dover, just north of Dover Castle.

Rating 5
Reviews 5
👍 I like it Skip

Admiralty Pier

The Admiralty Pier Turret or Dover Turret, is an enclosed armoured turret built in 1882 on the western breakwater of Dover Harbour in southeast England. It contains two Fraser RML 16 inch 80 ton guns, the biggest installed in the United Kingdom.

Rating 3.5
Reviews 3

Join us!

Keep the places you liked for later stored in your account.

Sign up

Twitter for Travelling

Join for free

Wrld is like Twitter but for travelling minded people!

  • Run by nonprofit
  • No ads
  • Best travel resources
  • Sign up

    Top places around

    South Kensington

    (363 reviews)

    South Kensington is a district just west of Central London in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea.

    View more

    Knights Templar Church

    (5 reviews)

    The Knights Templar Church in Dover is the ruins of a medieval church on Bredenstone hill, part of the Dover Western Heights in Kent, England.

    View more

    Sandgate Beach

    (195 reviews)

    View more

    Sondheim Theatre

    (695 reviews)

    The Sondheim Theatre (formerly the Queen's Theatre) is a West End theatre located in Shaftesbury Avenue on the corner of Wardour Street in the City of Westminster, London.

    View more

    Harold Pinter Theatre

    (604 reviews)

    The Harold Pinter Theatre, known as the Comedy Theatre until 2011, is a West End theatre, and opened on Panton Street in the City of Westminster, on 15 October 1881, as the Royal Comedy Theatre.

    View more
    Top