The Jancis Robinson Story | Mission Blind Tasting | Wine writing competition

Vinopolis – London's wine-based tourist attraction

• 5 min read

Wine-loving visitors to London who have half a day to spare could do far worse than visit Vinopolis on the south bank of the Thames between London and Southwark Bridges.

The easiest and arguably most scenic way to get there is to approach it from the City of London (St Paul's or Mansion House tube station for example) and walk across Southwark Bridge with Vintners Hall and the headquarters of the Vintgners Company, Masters of Wine, Wine and Spirit Education Trust, Wine and Spirit Benevolent Society and Wine Standards Board all at 1 Queen Street Place on your right, on the corner of Upper Thames Street and Southwark Bridge.

Once on the south bank, take the steps down by the Financial Times building on the left and walk along the river, past the pub until Vinopolis hoves into view on the right, under the southern reaches of the Cannon Street railway bridge. (The alternative is to go via London Bridge station, Borough High Street exit and make your way via Borough market, a good fresh food market at the weekend. You may have to ask the way.)

Vinopolis was launched with much hue and cry in July 1999 as a three-million-pound tourist attraction for wine lovers. So, now that 'Vinopolis, City of Wine' is up and running, as opposed to existing in the dubious form of a sheaf of ecstatic press releases and a hopeful gleam in the eye of the investors, is the reality worth visiting and how is it doing?

The first thing to be said is that the site itself is fantastic – fantastically awkward for the architects no doubt, as it is an oddly shaped warren of soaring brick arches wedged under a major railway line just south of the river Thames in an area which does not have its own tube stop. But the majesty of these towering Victorian vaults is inescapable, and the designers have been clever enough to make the most of them, leaving the warm brickwork fully exposed and well-lit. (Note that word warm. Most British railway arches are so damp that they've traditionally been used for wine storage, to keep all those corks nice and moist, so someone must have performed some dehumidifying miracles.)

The second thing that really surprised me is the quality of the design and materials. (The initial storyboards I was shown were the work of one of those naff artists who seem to have cornered the market in drawings for new airport lounges and midmarket housing developments: lots of 1960s women pointing their toes, that sort of thing. But the real thing is 21st century.)

Most London tourist attractions are aimed at, if not necessarily the lowest common denominator, then certainly those who will not notice whether the lavatories are lined with brushed stainless steel or scuffed hardboard. Much to my surprise and delight, the original Vinopolis gave every impression of aiming at some major design award.

That said, Vinopolis' original design turned out to be almost too tasteful for the masses – too much space. So the original tour has been redesigned with more clutter, and possibly more interest, but I imagine the original designer is pretty sniffy about it.

But visitors to London will really want to know, is it worth paying £11.50 to visit Vinopolis?

I suppose it all depends a) how much you know and b) how bored you are, but it's difficult to see exactly at whom the principal (educational) circuit, 'the Wine Odyssey', is aimed. Not at the deaf, that's for sure. The printed word is virtually banned. You wander from arch to arch with your elegantly designed, black leather audio guide (in six languages) slung round your neck. As you enter a new area, infra-red beams trigger the relevant introductory commentary. Otherwise you can key in the number posted on various exhibits for a brief explanation. Mostly it works – although if you're a real wine nut, you may not learn a great deal. (The bits I found most stimulating were a chart showing the relative altitudes of different wine regions and a large map of the vineyards of the ex Soviet Union, but this probably says more about how weird I am than Vinopolis.)

The scripts and graphics are unimpeachable (I had expected to be nitpicking throughout) but, in the end, not desperately exciting or informative. If you knew nothing about wine, you'd have to rely on a distinctly atypical video sequence on winemaking in hollowed out tree-trunks and buried earthenware jars in Georgia to learn how the stuff was actually made. There are not many moving parts, and none of that archival detail that can be so fascinating. Surely they could have found some old order books? Or, if they're so terrified of history, even a list of all the vine varieties and clones a modern nursery has to offer? Another example of phobia of the printed word.

They've tried hard not to be too, too stuffy, but arguably not hard enough. The voices (those of Hugh Johnson, Oz Clarke, Matthew Jukes and moi) are uniformly plummy. There's too much space devoted to France – although the Australian film sequences shown as though on a long-haul flight provide some welcome respite from the baroque doc style that predominates.

The breaths of fresh vinous air come in liquid form. Originally visitors would emerge, blinking, into the tasting hall only at the very end but the tour has sensibly been redesigned to offer tasting tables along the entire route, so glasses become rose-tinted earlier on. Visitors redeem vouchers for five quite generous pours chosen from dozens of different wines (a further five cost £2.50). These, of course, are sponsored, so it's more Dourthe than Domergue, for example, but on one visit there was vintage champagne (Nicolas Feuillatte) and Napa Valley Cabernet BV Georges De Latour 1995, no less. (The selection is changed every few months.)

And if the fresh air is not to be found in every single glass, it certainly emanates from the mouths of the young, enthusiastic staff here – a good proportion of them non-Brits, I should admit. They positively bristle with encouragement to try new wines and talk, potentially ad nauseum, about them.

After this, in the best traditions of tourist attractions everywhere, comes the sales pitch. You are directed towards the Vinopolis branch of Majestic Wine Warehouses, an excellent shop selling wine glasses, books and paraphernalia, another selling Neals Yard's superior cheeses, coffee etc, and you are encouraged to eat and drink some more.

So far, numbers through the ultra-chic, electronic turnstiles have fallen well short of the originally projected half million a year and, wouldn't you know it, the most financially successful parts of the operation have been the cavernous restaurant, Cantina Vinopolis, and the newer wine bar Wine Wharf which has one of London's best, constantly changing selections of wine by the glass and a range of good, light food. (Vinopolis has also enjoyed great success as a place for corporate entertaining, so atmospheric is it.)

It's not much good for visitors with children (although older ones might be diverted by The Clink, a prison museum next door, or the London Dungeon not too far away). And last entry is generally around 6pm with the tour closing at 8pm (Monday and Saturday are currently an hour later), although on holidays last entry can be as early as 4pm.

But Vinopolis will give wine-friendly visitors to London the warm, cosy feeling of being surrounded by like-minded people. You don't even have to buy an entrance ticket to absorb this heady, vinous atmosphere; just wander round the shops and have a glass or a meal in the Cantina Vinopolis or Wine Wharf. It's a beautiful space devoted to wine – and, outside the Napa Valley (which has lent Vinopolis part of the Hess art collection), the world boasts far too few of those.

Vinopolis – City of Wine, 1 Bank End, London SE1 9BU (+44 (0)207 940 8300)

选择方案
会员
$135
/year
每年节省超过15%
适合葡萄酒爱好者
  • 存取 296,888 条葡萄酒点评 & 16,132 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
核心会员
$249
/year
 
适合收藏家

Everything in “Member”, plus:

  • Early access to the latest wine reviews, 48 hours in advance
  • Early access to the latest articles, 48 hours in advance
专业版
$299
/year
供个人葡萄酒专业人士使用
  • 存取 296,888 条葡萄酒点评 & 16,132 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
  • 提前 48 小时获取最新葡萄酒点评与文章
  • 可将最多 25 条葡萄酒点评与评分 用于市场宣传(商业用途)
商务版
$399
/year
供葡萄酒行业企业使用

Everything in “Professional”, plus:

  • 可将最多 250 条葡萄酒点评与评分 用于市场宣传(商业用途)
  • Access to submit wines for review
  • Offer memberships to your employees and manage them from a single place
  • API access available for an additional fee
Pay with
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
Join our newsletter

Get the latest from Jancis and her team of leading wine experts.

By subscribing you agree with our Privacy Policy and provide consent to receive updates from our company.

More Free for all

Boscastle harbour
Free for all 非凡的海鲜和完美搭配的魔力在火箭仓库 (The Rocket Store)。上图为博斯卡斯尔港 (Boscastle harbour)。...
Ch Langoa Barton chai in May 2025
Free for all ISVV 的工作成果如何传递到各个酒庄?它又如何影响了葡萄酒?此外,波尔多顶级和底层酒庄的亮点。本文的一个版本发表于金融时报...
Emptied plates and glasses after a meal by Jason Lowe
Free for all 路边餐馆的乐趣,作者:查理·吉奥根 (Charlie Geoghegan)。照片由杰森·洛 (Jason Lowe) 拍摄。...
Opus One winery
Free for all 首个跨大西洋合资企业作品一号 (Opus One) 涉及20世纪葡萄酒界的标志性人物。本文的一个版本发表于《金融时报》(Financial...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Wanton at XO Kitchen
Bite-sized 鲜味爱好者们,向东出发,品尝让人下巴酸痛的美味融合菜肴和本州酸味鸡尾酒 (Honshu sour)。 XO 厨房 (XO Kitchen)...
chickens in the HJW vineyard at Hermann J Wiemer, Seneca Lake
Wines of the week 这款干白葡萄酒奠定了纽约手指湖 (Finger Lakes) 作为美国雷司令 (Riesling) 圣地的地位。而且它只会越来越好。售价...
Harvest at Robert Weil by Peter Quirin.jpg
Tasting articles 这是一个极度平衡的年份,拥有明亮的酸度和近年来记忆中最好的庄园级葡萄酒。此外还有大量优质的雷司令 (Riesling)。上图为罗伯特·威尔...
cheddars, apples and fruity red wine
Inside information 真正的切达配真正的葡萄酒。 通过某种小小的奇迹,我设法找到了那辆四个轮子都能正常运转的购物车。我对购物车任性之神的祈祷得到了回应...
Monty on the beach at Betty’s Bay, near Hemel-en Aarde
Tasting articles 来自南非一些最佳生产商的瓶装清凉与轻盈。上图,蒙蒂 (Monty) 在贝蒂湾 (Betty's Bay) 享受清凉的海浪,该地靠近天与地...
Chris Keets (left) and Banele Vanele (right)
Tasting articles 证明南非仍然是最值得探索的葡萄酒国家之一。上图为天气报告 (Weather Report) 的克里斯·基特 (Chris Keets)(左...
Lasseter Trinity Ridge Vineyard - Michael Housewright photography
Tasting articles 历史悠久的葡萄园、高海拔、火山土壤和有机种植的结合使这个鲜为人知的 AVA 脱颖而出。上图为 拉塞特酒庄 (Lasseter Winery)...
Cotta vineyard
Tasting articles 来自热浪年份的诱人清新且易饮的葡萄酒。索蒂马诺 (Sottimano) 从科塔 (Cottà) 特级园(如上图所示...
Wine inspiration delivered directly to your inbox, weekly
Our weekly newsletter is free for all
By subscribing you're confirming that you agree with our Terms and Conditions.