The Answers
Answer 1
Guido Velez is the guilty suspect. This is because the pub Vaulty Towers only opens at 11am. In Guido’s testimony, he says that he was there for a few hours before leaving at midday, so this must have been a lie.
Answer 2
You need to go around the bar ‘Cubana’ and cross the road, turning left past the Duke of Sussex pub. Then, keep going until you reach cut@waterloo. There is a sign with a smoking skull hanging outside it, which is the reference to a foreign smoking death.
Answer 3
You need to continue from cut@waterloo to the end of the road, where you meet a busy intersection. Here, you cross the road to the Hercules pub, which was the reference to the ‘hero’.
Answer 4
You need to go to the right of the Hercules pub, past the Florentine bar where there are references to sunrise, sunset and day and night, and continue straight ahead for 90 metres. You then arrive at The Pineapple pub, which is the reference to tropical treasure.
Answer 5
From The Pineapple pub, you must continue down the same road following the number over the railway arches, until you reach The Corner Café. You must then turn right and under the underpass. There is a sign on the left, which reads ‘109’, which is the reference to the grand digits.
Answer 6
When you enter the park, there is a trail to the left, with multiple signs explaining natural processes. Follow that round and continue straight on that path past football pitches. At the end, there is a fork in the road. There is a flowerpot saying ‘Lambeth In Bloom’. Here, follow the letters on the very left of each of those words (LIB), not the letters on the very right of the words (HNM). Then turn left again and you will reach an abandoned toilet, which is the building mentioned.
Answer 7
The answer is is Parliament Hall.
This is because each sentence is made up of the letters within the word “Parliament Hall”.
Answer 8
The answer is 1024.
For the first, you need to find the tile with the fox depicted on it, and count the letters in the artist’s full name (10). Then, as gifs is figs backwards, you must find the tile depicting figs and count the number of them in the artwork (2). Then, add the number of fish swimming clockwise in the fountain (4).
Answer 9
The answer is 60.
You walk out the park in the direction of the river, and turn right to face Lambeth Palace, where there are two entrances (one large and one small). You must continue to approach the entrances until you are physically in-line with the Lambeth Pier Café that sits on the other side of the road. When looking at the entrance, you have a clock with roman numerals ‘staring down’ at you from the 3 o’clock position. You must then remove the Is (which sounds like eyes phonetically) from the clock, leaving you with only the Vs and Xs. Adding these up gives you 60.
Answer 10
The answer is 50.
The riddle refers to the peacock and shell that are carved into the building. The answer to the riddle is the shell, so are you to follow the shells to the furthest right shell - which sits above a plaque for a person called Liebig. Beneath the name, you’ll find two plaques for the building called Nobel House - however it is spelt Nobel Hovse on the plaques. Focusing only one plaque, you must identify the letter that can be a roman numeral (the V) and translate this into a number (5). You must then also find the other two letters that can relate to a number on the plaque - which is the O. Multiplying 0 x 0 = 0. Therefore, the second digit is 0.
Answer 11
The answer is 56712.
There is a poem around the outside of this circular memorial. You need to look at the number directly underneath each word/collection of words mentioned to get your answer, which is 56712.