I seem to now be caught in quite a curious paradox with regard to the city around me. At one and the same time, London still seems to have an endless capacity to intrigue and inspire me: this afternoon, for instance, I decided to head up to Farringdon to explore a bit more of the area around the Barbican. There is an incredible raised path there called the Highwalk which you can walk along. I had never checked it out properly before, and thought it would be a cool destination for the afternoon. The whole area had a new, novel feel to it, and it was amazing to see the sheer amount of building work going on in that area.
At the same time, however, London is also starting to feel strangely tiresome. I have of course been to the Barbican before, quite a few times, to check out various shows and films. It is not that new to me. The paradox is, as inspiring as London still feels, it also seems mundane or even dull, for precisely the same reason. Take the Elizabeth Line as another example: nobody can possibly deny that it is an amazing feat of urban design and engineering; but by the same token it is quiet, clean and well maintained, lacking any kind of spark which might make it anything more than just an expensive tube line. What it has in efficiency it lacks in character, and thus could be any new tube line in any wealthy metropolis on Earth.
It is obvious that a huge amount of money is being spent on developing the city and building it up: as amazed as part of me is by that, it also feels like the city is just being transformed into a generic modern metropolis full of wealthy urban elites. Part of me is starting to crave getting out and exploring smaller, more authentic places. Thus, strangely, London feels both amazing and dull at exactly the same time.

