Boom Tower Old Portsmouth, Portsmouth PO1 2JW

Boom Tower

18 Reviews
  • FridayOpen 24 hours
  • SaturdayOpen 24 hours
  • SundayOpen 24 hours
  • MondayOpen 24 hours
  • TuesdayOpen 24 hours
  • WednesdayOpen 24 hours
  • ThursdayOpen 24 hours
Boom Tower Old Portsmouth, Portsmouth PO1 2JW

About the Business

Boom Tower - Scenic Point in Old Portsmouth |

Contacts

Call Us
+447398780920
Old Portsmouth, Portsmouth PO1 2JW

Hours

  • FridayOpen 24 hours
  • SaturdayOpen 24 hours
  • SundayOpen 24 hours
  • MondayOpen 24 hours
  • TuesdayOpen 24 hours
  • WednesdayOpen 24 hours
  • ThursdayOpen 24 hours

Features

  • LGBTQ+ friendly
  • Transgender safe space

Recommended Reviews

Anne Page
13.03.2024
Boom Tower
Excellent place to stay!
Russ Booth
19.02.2024
Boom Tower
You know when you have high expectations before your stay.. and then when you get there your bitterly disappointed... Well NOT here.. the place, the room, the amenities, the hosts and the location were perfect. Thoroughly enjoyed our 9 days and will be returning next year
Janine Clarke
13.01.2024
Boom Tower
Wow,wow,wow.Wonderful place,totally unique.Not giving too many details as I don't want to share the Boom Tower.If you do stay,you must take Mark up on the Fine Dining dinner.
Andrew Mullan
23.12.2023
Boom Tower
Great experience. Ships and boats passing all day.
Dinghuang Zhang
20.12.2023
Boom Tower
Old Navy bunker.
Gordon Knowles
19.12.2023
Boom Tower
On the 6th April 2018 I went on a visit to Southsea and Portsmouth to first visit the newly refurbished D day museum. Southsea is a seaside resort located next to Portsmouth at the southern end of Portsea Island, it is in the county of Hampshire. It developed as a fashionable Victorian seaside resort in the 19th. century, originally it was named named Croxton Town. The name Southsea originates from Southsea Castle; a fortified castle located on the seafront and constructed in 1544 to help defend the Solent and the important approaches to Portsmouth Harbour. Palmerston road is the main High Street of Southsea. Albert Road is a distinct street containing shopping and other cultural venues, which includes the Kings Theatre, a regional theatre built in 1907. The Pier here is great for a stroll on a hot summers day. It looks magnificent from any angle you view it.The D-Day Museum is located in Southsea, was the place I wanted to visit having seen it on the Internet. It was opened in 1984 by Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, it tells the story of Operation Overlord during the Normandy D - Day landings. The D - Day Museum is home to the Overlord Embroidery and was specially built to hold it. The Overlord Embroidery took five years to complete and measures 83 metres long. It is the largest work of its kind in the world.As well as the film and embroidery there are also vehicles and displays of other material associated with D-Day and the war. The museum has its own shop and restaurant. The museum is run by Portsmouth Museum Services, a branch of Portsmouth City Council, and is supported by Portsmouth D-Day Museum Trust, a registered charity. I have to say building work and renovation was still being carried out when I visited the Museum so I was a little unhappy with the £8.00 entrance ticket fee. Inside the Tapestry work they call it Embroidery work was unique. But the rest of the museum was clean laid out well but lacked something in presentation. Following a £5 million transformation project - with thanks to the Heritage Lottery Fund - the museum has now been transformed, to provide an engaging insight into the lives of those who took part in D - Day, whether they were individuals on the shore based in Portsmouth, or those who went over to Normandy.To commemorate the millennium, a scenic walk was created extending to Gunwharf Quays from Southsea seafront. Being the beginning of April this walk which I completed was very cold and windy. The route is marked on the pavement, and is lined by distinctive blue street lanterns. The Portsmouth Naval Memorial, sometimes known as the Southsea Naval Memorial, is a war memorial and can be seen on the Southsea Common beside Clarence Esplanade, between Clarence Pier and Southsea Castle. The memorial commemorates about 25,000 British and Commonwealth sailors who were lost in both World Wars. Around 10,000 sailors in the First World War and 15,000 in the Second World War lost their lives. The memorial features a central obelisk, with names of the dead on bronze plaques arranged around the memorial according to the year of their death. The Southsea Brewing Company is now open to the public on Saturdays & Sundays 12 - 4pm.
Clare Warbis
17.12.2023
Boom Tower
Perfect Air BnB

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Old Portsmouth, Portsmouth PO1 2JW
Boom Tower