Local Information

Woking Railway Station
Waterloo station, also known as London Waterloo, is a major central London railway terminus in London, England.  It is near the South Bank in the London Borough of Lambeth, and in Travelcard Zone 1. In the financial year from 2007/8 (during which Eurostar services stopped using it) the Waterloo complex including the Underground and Waterloo East handled some 187,236 million passengers (not counting interchanges on the underground), comparable to the Gare Saint-Lazare in Paris and only behind the Gare du Nord in Europe.[5] It has more platforms and a greater floor area than any other railway station in the UK. (Clapham Junction, just under four miles down the line, has the highest number of trains.) It is the terminus of a network of railway lines in South West England and the suburbs of London.
http://www.thetrainline.com/buytickets/


Chessington World of Adventures theme park and Zoo in south-west London, England, 12 miles from Central London, close to the A3 and M25 (junction 9 or 10).
The park has a selection of attractions, ranging from the Dragons Fury roller coaster, to family-oriented rides such as the Bubbleworks. It also has Zoo Animals many of which can be seen from the Safari Skyway, an elevated monorail around the zoo. Since 1998 Chessington has been in the same ownership as nearby Thorpe Park, and since 2007, Legoland Windsor. Chessington is presently undergoing a complete refurbish and the infrastructure is currently being fully brought up to date ready for a relaunch in 2010.


Legoland Windsor is a child-oriented theme park in Windsor, Berkshire, themed around the Lego toy system. The park opened in 1996 on the site of what was the Windsor Safari Park.. The park is located within close distance of Windsor Castle and about 8 miles west of London Heathrow Airport. In common with the other Legolands across the world, the park's attractions consist of a mixture of Lego-themed rides, Lego models, and Lego building workshops.  The facilities are mainly targeted at children between two and twelve, although the park is open to all.


Thorpe Park is a theme park located in Chertsey, Surrey, United Kingdom. It was built in 1979 on the site of a gravel pit which was partially flooded with the intention of creating a water based theme for the park. The park's first large roller coaster, Colossus, was added in 2002. In 2007, Tussauds was bought out by Merlin Entertainments, who now operate the park on a lease from Nick Leslau.[1][clarification needed]
Some of the major attractions at Thorpe Park include:

In 2007, the park had 1.7 million visitors, making it the third most visited amusement/theme park in the United Kingdom, after Alton Towers and Pleasure Beach; and 13th most visited in Europe.[2]