HMS Belfast sits in the Pool of London looking deceptively peaceful, as if she's merely taking a rest between engagements. She isn't. The ship saw action escorting Arctic convoys in brutal conditions, helped sink the German battlecruiser Scharnhorst, and fired some of the first shots at Normandy on D-Day. She even served in the Korean War before finally retiring to become Europe's largest preserved warship.
The nine-deck vessel offers an intimate look at naval life, from the cramped mess decks where sailors slept in hammocks to the operations room where battles were coordinated. Her guns, which could hit targets nearly thirteen miles away, still point silently toward the city.
VoiceMap's self-guided audio tours trace the ship's wartime history along the South Bank, connecting her to the broader story of London's river and the convoys that kept Britain supplied during the darkest years of the war.