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Oxford · Christ Church & Meadow

The Folly Restaurant

A contemporary floating restaurant moored on the Thames with panoramic river views and a retractable roof.

The Folly Restaurant, Oxford · Christ Church & Meadow
Category
Restaurant
Duration
1h 45m
Best Time
Any time
Entry
€€€
Rating
4.4 (1,492)
The place

About The Folly Restaurant

A contemporary floating restaurant moored on the Thames with panoramic river views and a retractable roof. Features modern British and European cuisine with an extensive cocktail menu. The outdoor terrace is particularly popular in warmer months.

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The place

Getting there

Address
1 Folly Brg, Oxford OX1 4JU, UK
Neighborhood
Christ Church & Meadow
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Good to know

Tips, answered

Book a table on the upper deck for the best Thames views, especially at sunset when you can watch the rowers pass by.

Plan for about 1h 45m.

The Folly Restaurant is in the Christ Church & Meadow neighborhood of Oxford. The address is 1 Folly Brg, Oxford OX1 4JU, UK. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Around the corner

Nearby in Christ Church & Meadow

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Christ Church Meadow
Park & Garden

Christ Church Meadow

Christ Church Meadow spreads across 100 acres of protected grassland where the River Cherwell meets the Thames, creating Oxford's most atmospheric riverside walk. You'll follow the same paths where Lewis Carroll strolled with Alice Liddell, dreaming up Wonderland stories. The New Walk cuts straight through the meadow under a canopy of towering elms, while smaller paths wind along both riverbanks past grazing cattle and towards the college boathouses. The meadow feels like stepping back into Victorian Oxford, especially along the tree-lined New Walk where dappled sunlight filters through ancient elms. Cattle wander freely (they're harmless but can be curious), and you'll hear the splash of rowing crews training on both rivers. The atmosphere shifts from formal near Christ Church's imposing Tom Tower to wild and rural at the furthest reaches where kingfishers dart between the reeds. Most visitors stick to the obvious New Walk avenue and miss the best bits entirely. The real magic happens along the quieter Thames path towards Folly Bridge, where you get proper river views without the college tour groups. Skip the crowded entrance near Christ Church cathedral (you'll pay £15 just to walk through) and use the free Memorial Garden gate instead. The meadow closes at dusk year-round, so don't plan evening visits.

1-2 hoursExplore
Christ Church College
Attraction

Christ Church College

Christ Church is the largest and most visited of Oxford's 38 colleges, and the one most people come to Oxford to see. It was founded by Cardinal Wolsey in 1524 and refounded by Henry VIII in 1546, which is why it has the royal connection that shaped its unusual status as both a college and a cathedral church. The Great Hall (GBP 18 entry to Christ Church, includes the hall and the cathedral) is the room that production designer Stuart Craig used as the direct model for the Great Hall in the Harry Potter films: the long tables, the high table at the end, the portraits of past students on the walls, the hammer-beam ceiling. Tom Tower, designed by Christopher Wren in 1681, stands above the main gate on St Aldate's. The cathedral doubles as the college chapel and contains a 12th-century Norman nave and the St Frideswide shrine. Christ Church Meadow runs south of the college buildings: 100 acres of meadow and riverside walk where Lewis Carroll (Charles Dodgson, mathematics lecturer at Christ Church) walked with Alice Liddell, daughter of the college dean, whose conversations with Dodgson became the direct source material for Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. The meadow is free to enter from St Aldate's or through the War Memorial Garden. The college is open to visitors daily (hours vary by term and academic calendar, check the website before visiting). The Picture Gallery (GBP 5 separate ticket, 200 works including Tintoretto, Veronese, and Leonardo drawings) is in the Canterbury Quadrangle.

1.5-2.5 hoursExplore
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