
English museum home to world-famous collection – as well as UK's oldest monorail
THE UK'S oldest monorail is based at a museum in the New Forest, between Southampton and Bournemouth.
The historic monorail, located at Beaulieu, stretches for a mile and allows guests to explore the museum from above.
4 The monorail celebrated 50 years since opening, last year Credit: Alamy
4 A ride on the monorail stretches for a mile Credit: Alamy
It even goes over the roof of the National Motor Museum.
As guests travel on the monorail, commentary tells the stories behind the different things they see on their journey.
Visitors can experience the monorail through regular services across the day.
Over 240,000 visitors take a trip on the Monorail each year.
Last year, the Monorail at Beaulieu celebrated 50 years since it opened in 1974.
Over the decades, visitors have enjoyed the travelling on the monorail at the museum.
Back in 1974, it was opened by The Wombles – the furry, secretive creatures created by Elizabeth Beresford.
However, it was not the first monorail at Beaulieu.
Before the 'Skytrain', there was a less permanent structure in place for the opening of the National Motor Museum in 1972.
This monorail featured battery operated mechanics, from milk floats and soon after it was launched, it was realised that something more permanent was needed.
Tiny English village named one of the most beautiful in the UK is home to huge motor museum
Butlin's was actually the thing that inspired a permanent monorail at the museum, as the resort at Skegness was home to the first commercial monorail system in the UK.
An agreement was made, whereby Beaulieu purchased the same mechanism to use for its 'Skytrain'.
The trains were recently named 'Monty' and 'Mary' and for the 50th anniversary, the monorail station underwent a refresh, with a new design on both the inside and outside of the carriages paying homage to the history of the ride.
Visitors can enjoy unlimited rides of the monorail during their visit to Beaulieu, as this is included in a general admission ticket.
There is even Beaulieu Monorail-themed merchandise in the museum's gift shop.
Beaulieu is also home to many other attractions for visitors to explore.
The National Motor Museum features some of the earliest motor carriages, as well as classic family saloons and Formula 1 cars.
4 Nearby is also Palace House, a medieval abbey that was renovated into a Victorian country house Credit: Alamy
Visitors can also head to the Palace House, which was once the gatehouse of the medieval Beaulieu Abbey and has been home to the Montagu's since 1538.
The palace was extensively remodelled in the 19th century, making it into a Victorian country house, with Gothic features.
A number of rooms in the Palace have recently been refurbished and will open to the public over Easter.
Tickets to the full attraction, including the above and more such as the gardens, is £27 per adult or £15.50 per child, when booked in advance.
The closest train station is Brockenhurst, where trains from London regularly stop.
A new tour of three historic UK train stations was recently announced.
Plus, the 150-year-old British train station named one of Europe's best.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Miami Herald
8 hours ago
- Miami Herald
I Got Taken in Buffalo
Buffalo didn't just surprise me—it ran up on me and kidnapped my whole perspective. I come from a New York where anything outside of the five boroughs might as well have been farmland. Truth be told, when you live down the street from Yankee Stadium, even heading to the neighboring borough of Queens might as well have been a road trip to the Carolinas. And the idea of going 'upstate'? Man, that felt like exile. I wasn't checking for Buffalo. I wasn't even curious. But this city caught me slippin'. Fed me soul with a side of sazón, introduced me to people who felt like family, and told stories that hit like a history lesson and a homecoming all at once. It peeled back my biases, shook up my mental map, and reminded me that domestic travel, if done right, can feel like therapy, too. I came looking to document a destination. But Buffalo didn't just make the itinerary, it took the wheel. See, what's not on the Niagara Falls/Buffalo brochure is that Buffalo's got a whole lotta soul. This is a city where history is honored and creativity in the arts and music runs wild. And somewhere between the first bite and the last museum, it stole something. I didn't just leave impressed. I left held hostage… in the best way possible. I remember I touched down from my flight, and within the first five hours, I was already seduced by this hardworking city's charm. After four years of living in the South and getting used to a version of down-home hospitality, I didn't expect to find a similar kind of welcome in a place more famous for its winters than its warmth. But Buffalo really surprised me. The people's hearts were as wide open as former Bills defensive end Bruce Smith. The Hideout Right in the middle of Buffalo's artsy Elmwood Village neighborhood is InnBuffalo, a restored 19th-century mansion that feels like walking on the set of Downton Abbey. The overused term 'boutique accommodations' doesn't even begin to describe the storybook elegance of this inn. Check-in started with a calligraphy envelope reading my name and a vintage skeleton key to the Sarah Dutro suite. No plastic key cards here, and no elevators. As I climbed the deep cherrywood staircase—two full flights—each step creaked just enough to remind me this wasn't some prefab Victorian knockoff - this bed and breakfast was Buffalo legacy. From antique chandeliers and bold, textured wallpaper to a parlor and library you could post up in for hours listening to jazz playing from their in-house phonograph, InnBuffalo blends that old-school soul with new-school comfort, high-speed Wi-Fi, spa-level bedding, and breakfast is included. No surprise it's been ranked the #1 hotel in Buffalo, just 20 minutes from Niagara Falls. But the real gem here is owner Joe Lettieri. He welcomed my family and I like old friends, pouring wine and sharing Buffalo's storied past as we relaxed on the inn's front porch. Joe confirmed what I was already starting to feel: in Buffalo, the connection is real. And that kind of authenticity? It's rare. Captured by the Food If you really want to get to my heart, the most direct route is through my stomach. And Buffalo's culinary scene? It didn't just show up, it showed out. The food wasn't just good—it was tied to the city's lesser-known identity and strong Latin culture that runs deeper than most folks realize. At Aguacates Bar & Grill, Latin flavor takes the spotlight without trying too hard. It's a small joint with a big personality. Yes, it's Mexican on paper, but the whole vibe is Buffalo. Judging by the heavy Buffalo wall decor, I didn't expect much when I ordered their ropa vieja which was slow-cooked, tender beef. But the second I caught that aroma coming toward the table, I knew I was in for something worth writing about. Paired with perfectly salted tostones that were just the right kind of crispy, I had to pause mid-bite and revel. Washed it all down with a house margarita rimmed in sweet tamarind and jalapeño, creating a chef's kiss of sweet heat and slow burn. Then there was Niagara Café, a Puerto Rican classic where every dish feels like it came straight from abuela's kitchen. As a Dominican man, believe me when I say the pernil didn't miss. Juicy, seasoned to perfection, served in a no-frills setting that let the food speak loudest. The arroz con gandules took me right back to Nochebuena dinners when you couldn't get up from the table until that plate was spotless. Nothing changed. I didn't leave those unpretentious booths until I was full and full of respect. This wasn't performative food culture, this was generational love on a plate. For drinks, you gotta slide through to Deco Lounge, a Black-owned speakeasy near Buffalo's City Hall, where curated cocktails are the real headline. Skip the cocktail menu, and just let the bartender do his thing. Snatched By The Stories One of the most inspiring people I met was Michelle Agosto, co-founder of Los Artistas Del Barrio. Her collective of Latino creatives has turned Buffalo's streets, galleries, and walls into living expressions of culture and resistance. Here, murals aren't just big paintings—they're declarations of pride, struggle, and power. Michelle's not just an artist—she's also the Director of Arts for Buffalo Public Schools and sits on countless boards pushing for real social change in connection to the arts. Basically, she walks it like she talks-- and paints it. Tied Up In The Past My first landmark stop was Freedom Park (Broderick Park), once a vital Underground Railroad crossing point. It's a humble one-room museum, but with the help of its main advocate George Johnson who moonlit as our guide, the story it tells hits deep. You don't just read about freedom here—you feel the weight of what it still costs for some organizations in Buffalo to thrive to this day. A few blocks over, Buffalo Naval Park and Canalside offers a fully layered experience. On one side, you've got live music, riverside energy, and family-friendly events, but on the other, powerful memorials to Black and Latino veterans—names and faces too often overlooked in our American War history. This wasn't just another tourist stop, it felt like sacred ground. Outside the city, The Niagara Falls Underground Railroad Heritage Center takes Buffalo's rich Black cultural history even further. Here you realize how much Canada played a critical and often time risky role in helping enslaved people not just escape—but truly live free. The museum's design pulls you in, the storytelling keeps you there. It corrects the watered-down versions of the Underground Railroad we were taught in school and tells the truth with clarity and care. And if you want to further understand Buffalo's Black legacy, the African American Heritage Corridor walk is a must. Start with the Michigan Street Baptist Church, where freedom seekers once found refuge. Hit the Nash House Museum, home to civil rights leader Rev. J. Edward Nash. Then end at the Colored Musicians Club—still active, still vibrant, still the only Black-owned music club of its kind in the U.S. The walls don't just echo jazz—they echo resistance, resilience, and Black brilliance. And for a nightcap with soul? Silo City's Duende is where Buffalo's industrial past has transformed into a creative designed area for you to enjoy Buffalo after dark. Massive grain silos turned into art spaces that host raw live music, poetry, and no fluff, just puro vibes. End your trip with a visit to Buffalo's City Hall which surprisingly, one of the country's best examples of art deco architecture. Take the elevator to the observation deck and let the panoramic view sink in. It's the perfect vantage point to realize you didn't just visit Buffalo. You got taken. How Buffalo Got Away With It Buffalo didn't just welcome me, it reminded me how rich, layered, and full of heart the 'other' New York really is. I came looking for content, I left with a connection. Buffalo pulled a heist on my whole perspective. This city, its food, its people, its past, has snatched my heart and rewrote my map of what 'New York' actually means. I came here thinking I'd capture Buffalo. But the truth is? Buffalo captured me. Rafael Peña is a travel advisor, member of the International Luxury Hotel Association, and founder of the BLUX Travel Club, which curates solo and group trips, as well as relocation services tailored for BIPOC travelers. With over a decade of experience as a travel strategist, journalist, and public speaker, Peña is dedicated to reshaping his community's approach to travel.
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
Translink moves some bus services to Grand Central Station
Translink has announced bus services from Downpatrick, Newcastle and Ballynahinch will operate from Belfast Grand Central Station from July. The move aligns with the launch of Translink's summer timetable and aims to enhance passenger convenience and connectivity, it said. The changes will see Goldliner coach and Ulsterbus services, including routes 215, 515 and 516 to Downpatrick; 237 and 520 to Newcastle; and the 652 to Ballynahinch via Cairnshill Park and Ride and Carryduff, all depart from Belfast from 1 July. It is part of Translink's ongoing transition to the £340m public transport hub in the centre of Belfast, which opened last September. Translink's acting general manager for bus services, Phillip Woods, highlighted several benefits that such a move will bring for passengers. "We are pleased that our services will now offer customers greater convenience, access to modern facilities, and better connections to other bus, rail, cross-border and airport services," he said. Mr Woods also confirmed that while Grand Central Station will be the main departure point, Adelaide Street will remain an outbound stop. On return journeys, buses will revert to their previous city centre set-down stop at Bedford Street before completing their routes at Grand Central. In addition, Translink will introduce a new express service, which will provide a faster, direct evening peak journey to Newcastle via the M1 bus lanes through Ballynahinch. Changes will also affect the Metro network, with Metro 8 services relocating to their former stop at Donegall Square East from Howard Street, while continuing to travel via Great Victoria Street and Wellington Place. Contrasting fortunes of two listed Victorian buildings on same street All you need to know about Belsonic Downpatrick flood scheme could cost over £20m

National Geographic
12 hours ago
- National Geographic
10 destinations where you can ditch your car this summer
More than 45 million U.S. travelers took road trips for Memorial Day 2025—an increase of approximately one million from the previous year, breaking the 2005 record of 44 million people driving to their desired destination for the holiday weekend. Choosing a car-free destination is a way both to save at the pump and help save the planet. Places that prohibit, or at least greatly restrict, motorized vehicles range from the well-known (Venice, Italy, the world's largest pedestrian zone), to the less-charted Geithoorn in the Netherlands and Holbox Island in Mexico. A horn-free, less-hurried vacation can be more relaxing. 'Traveling without a vehicle alleviates the stresses of route-finding under pressure, the headache, and expense of finding parking spots in busy city centers, and allows people to slow down and soak in a destination at walking speed,' says Paul Melhus, CEO and cofounder of ToursByLocals, which leads trips to auto-free zones, including Dubrovnik in Croatia, Governor's Island in New York, and Hydra Island in Greece. Here are 10 places where you can ditch your wheels and start unplugging immediately. Tunø, Denmark Inhabited since the Stone Age and just 1.4 square miles, Denmark's Tunø is easy to explore on foot, bike, scooter, and traxas, the island's tractor taxis. Travelers arrive via a scenic hour-long ferry from Hou (on the Odder Coast of Jutland), perhaps spotting seals and porpoises along the way. Covered in lush green hills that rise above sandy, stony beaches, the island lures hikers and birders. The best views come at the tower of the 14th-century Tunø Church, an unusual combination of chapel and lighthouse surrounded by apple trees and blackberry bushes. Tunø has several restaurants and a microbrewery, as well as a former dairy converted into a soothing and affordable seaside inn. Mackinac Island, Michigan Victorian architecture and old-fashioned atmosphere draw visitors to Michigan's Mackinac Island. Cars are banned, so tourists get around the 3.8-square-mile island on foot, bike, or via horse-drawn carriage. Photograph by Wiltser, Getty Images Located on Lake Huron between Michigan's upper and lower peninsulas, Mackinac Island has been a popular vacation spot since the late 19th century. More than 80 percent of the 3.8-square-mile island is covered by Mackinac Island State Park, with its natural trails and butterfly conservatory. Historic buildings in the postcard-pretty downtown hold boutiques and restaurants including coffeeshop/art school the Watercolor Café and the Ice House BBQ with its expansive garden. The island's seven confectionaries crank out 10,000 pounds of fudge a day. The Grand Hotel, built in 1887 and home to the world's longest front porch, just added a new BMX bike path, a miniature golf course, pickleball courts, and a greenhouse nature center. (Explore why it's important to preserve historic hotels.) Medina of Fez, Morocco One of the largest contiguous car-free urban locations in the world, the 690-acre Medina of Fez is a UNESCO World Heritage site and the best-preserved medieval town in Morocco. Its 9,400 narrow, meandering streets are open only to foot and donkey traffic. Beyond its souks—which sell food, spices, lanterns, and leather—the medina holds centuries-old palaces, mosques, fountains, and schools. The Bab Boujloud (blue gate), is the main entrance to the old town. Dar Batha, a palace museum, has an excellent collection of local artifacts, especially textiles and embroidery, plus a garden with a mosaic patio and fountain. Stay at one of the city's many riads, historic mansions that have been transformed into boutique hotels. While non-Muslims are prohibited from entering most mosques, the library of the ornate Al Quaraouiyine Mosque is open to the public. Trogir, Croatia The 13th-century Cathedral of St. Lawrence towers over the old town in Trogir, Croatia. The island is a UNESCO World Heritage site due to its wealth of medieval and Baroque buildings. Photograph by Robert Harding, Alamy Stock Photo A UNESCO World Heritage site with Hellenistic roots (B.C. 323-33), this small island settlement in the Adriatic features architecture from Roman to Baroque. Located an hour west of Split—reachable by bus, taxi, or water taxi—Trogir holds a quaint, cobblestoned Old Town with pristinely preserved medieval buildings. The finest might be the 13th-century Cathedral of St. Lawrence with its 150-foot bell tower, three naves, and a stone portal featuring intricately carved nude images of Adam and Eve. A short-but-dazzling waterfront promenade is lined with palm trees, seafood restaurants, and cafés. Local guide Dino Ivančić jokes, 'I can't keep up with them all. They are like mushrooms, popping out after the rain.' Several music festivals take place here in the summer. For the sunny Adriatic beaches Croatia is known for, Čiovo is a quick walk over a pedestrian bridge. Little Corn Island, Nicaragua A spit of land once frequented by pirates, Little Corn Island feels like a lost tropical paradise. Maybe that's because getting here requires a flight to Great Corn Island, about 50 miles off the coast of Nicaragua, then an eight-mile boat ride onward in the Caribbean. Although tourism is Little Corn's biggest business, even high season is crowd-free. Walk the one-square-mile island under mango, breadfruit, and coconut trees. Or sink into a hammock on palm-shaded beaches. If you're not daunted by heights, climb the vertical metal ladder to the top of the Little Corn Lighthouse, a lightless tower with impressive views of the island and its candy-colored sunsets. Hiking and horseback riding paths head into the jungle and along the shoreline. The idyllic waters surrounding Little Corn can be explored via paddleboard, kayak, or Miskito, a type of primitive wooden sailboat named after the Indigenous people who created them. Porquerolles Island, France A 10-minute water shuttle from the Cote d'Azur zips nature and history fans to Porquerolles, the most-visited of France's Golden Isles. Its pristine stretches of sand, limestone cliffs, and lush greenery can be explored via hiking and biking trails that crisscross the seemingly trapped-in-time island, 80 percent of which forms Port-Cros National Park. Beaches, including secluded Notre Dame, can be reached by ferry, foot, or the many e-bikes for rent. Tour gardens and several historic fortresses, including the 14-century Sainte-Agathe Fort. The Villa Carmignac, a Provençal farmhouse-turned-museum, fills 21,000 square feet with contemporary art. The main village, founded in the 19th century, claims the bulk of the island's 22 restaurants and several shops. There are also dozens of lodgings options, from boutique hotels and villas to houseboats. The blissful surrounds draw thousands of visitors a day in the summer, making spring or early fall the best time to come. Channel Islands, California Wildlife watchers, kayakers, and hikers find crowd-free, car-free nature in California's windswept Channel Islands National Park. Five of these eight small islands off the coast of Santa Barbara can be accessed by private plane or boat or via ferries which operate several times a week in season. The trip through the Pacific takes between one hour to four hours each way; upon arrival you'll need your own water—and a tent if you want to stay over. (Take this epic trail around Canada's Prince Edward Island.) Isolation and a unique mix of warm and cool ocean waters fuel biodiversity on both land and sea. In the depths off Santa Cruz, Santa Barbara, and Anacapa islands, snorkelers and divers might see giant black sea bass and California moray eel amid kelp forests and sea caves. Worthwhile hiking trails include a flat walk to Water Canyon Beach on Santa Rosa Island and a grueling 16-miler on foggy, challenging-to-reach San Miguel Island, best attempted with a guide. Birders come to the islands to spot Western gulls, Brandt's cormorants, Scripps's murrelets, and the only nesting population of California brown pelicans along the West Coast. Hoi An, Vietnam Chua Cau, commonly known as the Japanese Covered Bridge, is a wooden structure dating to the 16th century. It's among the historic attractions in the old town of Hội An, Vietnam. Photograph by Peter Forsberg, Alamy Stock Photo Scenic and compact, Hội An is a former colonial trading port on the Thu Bồn River in central Vietnam. Its Old Town, a UNESCO World Heritage site, features 1,000 buildings dating from the 15th through 19th centuries, including shophouses and pagodas. Its most photographed spot? A 400-year-old Japanese bridge, built, some believe, to prevent the mythical Japanese monster Namazu from thrashing about and causing earthquakes. The nights here are ambient and lantern-lit; days buzz with cruises on round, Vietnamese basket boats, cooking classes, or visits to one of Hội An's legendary tailors, who can whip up a custom dress or suit in 48 hours. Refuel with a sweet Vietnamese coffee or a banh mi; Hội An is considered a sandwich capital. There are numerous lodging options, including the new Hội An May Village and Hội An Riverland Villa. Pontevedra, Spain Less than an hour's drive southwest from Spain's Santiago de Compostela, Pontevedra (the capital of a Galician province by the same name) went car-free in 1999, helped by a government program that created 1,600 free parking spaces around its perimeter. Now travelers can traverse Pontevedra's Old Town end-to-end in a 25-minute walk, taking in handsome stone buildings, including the Gothic-style Santa Maria Basilica and the barrel-shaped Church of the Pilgrim Virgin, who is said to guide voyagers along the Portuguese route of the Camino de Santiago. (Learn why the pandemic spurred a pilgrimage travel boom.) Pontevedra Museum showcases Celtic coins, religious iconography, and contemporary paintings. The city's tree-lined central plaza, Plaza de la Herrería, is surrounded by restaurants and bars, most pouring the crisp white wines of the nearby Rías Baixas. After lunch, walk over the Lérez River via the Burgo Bridge, a medieval crossing built over a Roman one. Rottnest Island, Australia Water and wildlife are the big draws at Rottnest Island ('Rotto' to locals), a short ferry ride from Perth, amid the coral reefs and shipwrecks off Australia's western coast. Dozens of beaches offer swimming, snorkeling, sea bikes, and other watery diversions. Glass-bottomed boat trips spotlight marine life such as bottlenose dolphins and 400 species of fish. Rottnest (a mere seven miles by three miles) is small enough to walk in a day, but is best seen via hop-on, hop-off buses that loop around the island, or on an e-bike or Segway. Or explore hidden coves and shorebird-rich wetlands on the Wadjemup Bidi, a 27-mile network of walking trails. Keep an eye out for quokkas, native wallabies with upturned lips that some say are the happiest animal in the world. The Indigenous Whadjuk Noongar people inhabited the island thousands of years ago. Landmarks related to their culture headline in GoCultural's Aboriginal Tours and Experiences. This article was updated on June 6, 2025, but originally published on May 18, 2022.