
During Roman times the River Thames was much wider and shallower than it is today, so you could get away with mud hopping. The Romans were nice enough to build the first one, probably using a combination of floating platforms and walkways. Do you know all the verses to the children's song, "London Bridge is falling down"? They will take you through the history of London so let's have a look, shall we? First we need a bridge, in order for it to fall down. "When a man is tired of London, he is tired of life for there is in London all that life can afford." - Samuel Johnson. If you would like to learn more about licensing panoramic photos from 360Cities (orĬommissioning new ones) for advertising, Film VFX, or stock photography, please contact If you are a photographer and you want to publish your own panoramas on 360Cities, you If you want to order panoramic photos or a virtual tour of your business,
2020 DESIGN 360 PANORAMA PRO
We offer businesses of all sizes a beautiful presence on the Web through our PRO Member Panoramic photos, created by our talented community of member photographers. We publish, license, and distribute the world's largest collection of geolocated We show you the world's most beautiful places in 360°. Use in connection with your marketing campaign, tourism promotion, etc. We will shoot and deliver a specially commissioned spherical gigapixel photo for you to
2020 DESIGN 360 PANORAMA DOWNLOAD
Download press release Download media package Commission a gigapixel The package includes snapshots from this panorama, which you can use in your publication. If you would like us to create a large gigapixel panorama like you see here, please contact 360Cities.ĭownload our press release and media package here. You can see our other world record gigapixel images we have made of Tokyo.

If printed at normal resolution, the photo would be 98 meters long (323 feet) and 23 meters high (77 feet) – almost as big as Buckingham Palace!


The pictures were taken using Canon EOS 7D cameras with EF 400mm f/2.8 IS II USM lenses and Extender EF 2x III teleconverters driven by special Rodeon VR Head ST robotic panorama heads from the Clauss company in Germany. It is comprised of 48,640 individual images shot over a period of three days and processed over a period of three months using a powerful Fujitsu Celsius R920 workstation provided by Fujitsu Technology Solutions Europe. The panorama was shot by Jeffrey Martin, Holger Schulze and Tom Mills and then subsequently created by Jeffrey Martin. We created this 320 gigapixel panorama of London from the BT Tower in partnership with British Telecom to commemorate the Olympic summer of 2012.
