Covent Garden Market
Charles Fowler's 1830s iron and glass market hall contains three connected buildings around a central piazza where professional street performers audition for licenses to perform.
About Covent Garden Market
Charles Fowler's 1830s iron and glass market hall contains three connected buildings around a central piazza where professional street performers audition for licenses to perform. The Apple Market in the north building rotates between antiques on Mondays and handmade crafts Tuesday-Sunday, while the east and west buildings house permanent shops from Penhaligon's perfumes to Neal's Yard Remedies.
The acoustics under the Victorian canopy amplify every busker and magician, creating a constant soundtrack that either energizes or overwhelms depending on your tolerance. Performers stick to designated spots marked by small plaques, and the quality varies dramatically between the licensed regulars and weekend hopefuls. The upper galleries offer breathing room and better sightlines, but most tourists cluster around ground-level performances.
The reality: it's genuinely entertaining for about an hour, then the novelty wears thin and prices become grating. Skip the overpriced restaurants facing the piazza - they're tourist traps. The real finds are in the basement level of the market buildings, where rents are lower and shops more authentic. Early morning before 10am gives you the architecture without the chaos.
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