| PIMLICO | Area neighbouring Belgravia in the City of Westminster, site of a number of blue plaques including those of Winston Churchill and Joseph Conrad (7) |
| LOBBY | Members' -; hall in the Palace of Westminster, site of the Churchill Arch (5) |
| PATELLA | Dish including T-bone (7) |
| OFFENBACH | Composer from low-lying area, neighbouring another (9) |
| AWAITS | Hopes for area neighbouring Western Isles (6) |
| ENGLISHHERITAGE | With a logo in the form of a stylised castle, body that looks after historic monuments/buildings and administers blue plaques (7,8) |
| CHARINGCROSS | District of London in the City of Westminster housing a railway station (7,5) |
| SOHO | A district of London's West End in the City of Westminster, chiefly known for its restaurants and clubs (4) |
| HORSEFERRYROAD | London street best known as the site of the City of Westminster Magistrates' Court |
| GARDNER | Honoured with a blue plaque in 2016, an actress who starred in The Killers and The Snows of Kilimanjaro (7) |
| EMBANKMENT | London tube station in the City of Westminster on the Circle, District, Bakerloo and Northern lines (10) |
| ADELPHI | District of the City of Westminster named after London's first neo-classical building, built by the Adam brothers |
| MARYLEBONE | Area of the City of Westminster which includes Baker Street and Harley Street (10) |
| ALEXANDRAPALACE | According to a blue plaque on ____, it was the site of the world's first regular high definition TV broadcasts, in 1936 |
| CAMDEN | Inner London borough to the north of the City of Westminster (6) |
| ALDWYCH | Street and its surrounding area in the City of Westminster (7) |
| BARRIE | Author commemorated with a blue plaque on Bayswater Road who wrote about the adventures of a boy who wouldn't grow up (6) |
| TRAFALGAR | Public square in the City of Westminster, London, _ Square (9) |
| PALLMALL | Street in the City of Westminster, London, known for its many clubs |
| ANNA | Forename of Sigmund Freud's daughter whose pioneering work in child psychoanalysis is remembered with a blue plaque (4) |