A classical building with a Thames axis
In 1616, Anne of Denmark asked Inigo Jones to design the house, and by the late 1630s Greenwich had Britain's first fully classical building. Its bright geometry looked startling beside the red-brick Tudor world around it, which is why people simply called it the White House. Later, Queen Mary II insisted that new buildings should not block its view to the Thames, and that visual axis still shapes Greenwich today.
The Tulip Stairs and Great Hall still steal the show
The staircase is the part most people remember first, and with good reason. The Tulip Stairs were the first unsupported spiral staircase in Britain, and they pull you upward into the luminous cube of the Great Hall. Add the 2016 ceiling intervention by Richard Wright, and the room feels less like a relic and more like a stage set that still has a pulse.
The Armada Portrait gives the house its royal charge
The Armada Portrait of Elizabeth I gives the house its royal voltage. Even though the building postdates Elizabeth I, she was born in Greenwich, and the portrait in the Queen's Presence Chamber reconnects the site to Tudor power, image-making, and the memory of 1588. It is one of those rooms that instantly makes the whole address feel grander than its scale.
Art lovers should give it longer
If you love pictures, this is not a room-to-room sprint. The house shows more than 450 artworks, from Canaletto and Gainsborough to contemporary names, and J.M.W. Turner's The Battle of Trafalgar added a new draw in October 2025. First-timers can keep to the highlights, but repeat visitors and art-focused travelers should give the galleries longer, because this is where Greenwich stops feeling only monumental and starts feeling personal.