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Soho

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This article is about the area of London. See also New York's SoHo district, and SOHO, the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory. SOHO is also an acronym meaning Small Office, Home Office.


Soho is an area of London's West End in the City of Westminster. It is roughly the area between Oxford Street on the north, Regent Street on the west, Piccadilly Circus and Leicester Square on the south, and Charing Cross Road on the east. The area to the west is Mayfair.

Soho is named after a hunting cry, dating back to the time when Soho was a small village on the outskirts of London surrounded by fields. Its name is deliberately imitated by the SoHo district of Manhattan.

A major event in the history of public health was the study of an outbreak of cholera in Soho by Dr. John Snow. According to an apocryphal story, he identified the cause of the outbreak as the public water pump in Broad Street, and disabled it, thus ending the outbreak.

It is the heart of London's theatre area, and a centre of the independent film and video industry, as well as the television and film post-production industry. Soho is also notable as the home of London's main gay village, centered on Old Compton Street, and for the Chinatown.

Though Soho has a thriving night-life, visitors should be wary of straying from brightly-lit and busy streets; the area has seen a marked increase in drug-dealing and violence in recent years.

Soho is also criss-crossed by the rooftop free space communications laser beams of Sohonet, which connects the Soho media and post-production community to other major production centres.

Nearest places:

Nearest tube stations:

Major streets in, or bordering Soho:

Notable places in Soho: