Dowdeswell House LOWER DOWDESWELL • GLOUCESTERSHIRE

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Dowdeswell House LOWER DOWDESWELL • GLOUCESTERSHIRE Dowdeswell House LOWER DOWDESWELL • GLOUCESTERSHIRE Dowdeswell House LOWER DOWDESWELL • GLOUCESTERSHIRE • THE COTSWOLDS Cheltenham 4 miles • Kingham 15 miles (London Paddington 1½ hours) Cirencester 16 miles • Oxford M40 36 miles • Bristol 45 miles Bristol International Airport 55 miles (all mileages and times are approximate) A beautifully proportioned 6/7 bedroom Listed Georgian house with cutting edge interiors, wonderful views, infinity swimming pool, tennis court and sauna. ACCOMMODATION Second floor: Coach House providing: Ground floor: Two double bedrooms with en-suite Stabling • garage • boiler room Reception hall • Drawing room bathroom, dressing room and store workshop and stores Dining room • Sitting room rooms extensive loft space Kitchen/breakfast room • Utility room Further storage rooms Cold store • Boot room Total area for the house and Spring fed infinity swimming pool Two cloakrooms Coach House Tennis court • Sauna First Floor: 9,622 sq ft (893.91 sq m) Terrace garden • Walled garden Master bedroom suite with dressing Greenhouse room, en-suite bathroom and wet room Pond • Orchard and paddock Guest bedroom with bath In all about 6.5 acres (2.63 hectares) Three further double bedrooms Family bathroom • Laundry room For sale freehold Savills Country Department Savills Cheltenham 33 Margaret Street The Quadrangle, Imperial Square, London W1G 0JD Cheltenham, GL50 1PZ [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Tel +44 (0) 1242 548000 Tel +44 (0) 7016 3825 savills.co.uk Your attention is drawn to the important notice on the last page of the text Gloucestershire Dowdeswell House is ideally located just outside Cheltenham with festivals, The Literary Festival, The Jazz Festival and The Science Station (15 miles away) a fast route to London Paddington taking far reaching views across the Dowdeswell Valley to May Hill and the Festival. approximately an hour and 30 minutes. Welsh Hills beyond. The area is well served by restaurants with the well-known There are extensive sporting opportunities in the area including The property sits in an elevated position in the attractive lower half Wheatsheaf in Northleach, and in Cheltenham “131” and racing at Cheltenham, Stratford-upon-Avon and Warwick, polo at of Dowdeswell Village which is mentioned in the Domesday Book Champignon Sauvage. Cirencester Park and Kirtlington, golf at Cheltenham, Cirencester and is within a Conservation Area. Communications are very good in the area with the A40 and M40 and Naunton Downs, Broadway and Lyneham, and there are also Upper Dowdeswell has a cricket pitch and the nearby village of providing east/west access to London, Cheltenham and the M5 water sports at the nearby Cotswold Water Park just south of Andoversford has a village shop, post office, public house and the while the nearby Fosse Way and the A417 give excellent north/ Cirencester. Cotswold Point to Point course. south access to Birmingham and the M4. A number of good local schools including Cheltenham College The Regency town of Cheltenham (4 miles) is internationally Heathrow Airport is approximately 82 miles away whilst Bristol and Cheltenham Ladies College, Rendcomb College, Dean Close, famed for its shopping, including many well-known London and International Airport is only 37 miles away with an increasing Westonbirt School with a more extensive range in Oxford, all of international stores and also a Waitrose and a Wholefoods store, which are within easy reach. which offers local and organic produce. There are many restaurants, number of international flights. theatres and unspoilt architecture to enjoy. Many London firms Cheltenham Spa Station (5 miles) offers direct rail services to have recently moved to Cheltenham and also it is the home of three London Paddington (from 2 hours 6 minutes) or from Kingham Dowdeswell House Dowdeswell House dates back to the early 17th Century and was originally the dower house to Dowdeswell Court. The property has been extended in the centuries that followed and is now a T-shaped house. The property is Grade II Listed and includes a range of useful outbuildings with the potential to create secondary accommodation subject to the necessary planning consent. The main Georgian façade faces south west and is covered in wisteria with attractive dormer windows above. The previous owners were there for 20 years and sold in 2007 to move nearby. The current owner is moving into Dowdeswell Court, having done an extensive modernisation and renovation programme on Dowdeswell House during his ownership. The house retains many period features whilst having more cutting edge decoration and internal fittings using modern technology to enhance everyday living. The house is heated with a Biomass boiler with a backup oil boiler. All services have been upgraded and updated. The house has its own spring water supply which also feeds the infinity edge swimming pool. The Accommodation The current owners have transformed the house, bringing it into the 21st century with clean crisp decoration with a light and cool atmosphere. Modern technology has been integrated with period features making for a very comfortable and practical family house. Double glazed doors under a stone arched portico leads to the hall with oak floors, partly exposed stone wall with a glazed fireplace which serves the hall and the sitting room. The house has working shutters to all the Georgian sash windows, which provides for extremely light and airy rooms. The drawing room is a charming room with attractive bay windows at the western end giving extensive views over the grounds and the valley beyond, and an open fireplace. From the reception hall an inner hall leads through to the sitting room and cloakroom. The sitting room is a good family room with fireplace, fitted bookshelves and again with large sash windows making it a very light room. The dining room has oak floors, a double bay window with working shutters and still retains its cornice and plaster ceiling rose. The kitchen/breakfast room has been totally refurbished whilst having a stone floor and oil fired Aga and a fitted kitchen with shaker style painted units and composite worktops, Miele fridge freezer, door to a second kitchen/utility room with stone floor, gas hob and oven, Miele oven and coffee maker, twin Belfast sinks, walk-in cold store and door to boiler room. Boot room with separate WC and door to the outside with access to the cellar. Upstairs the accommodation on the first floor is based around an L-shaped landing and all the rooms to the front of the house enjoy wonderful views over the valley. There is a guest bedroom with large bay window and freestanding brushed steel bath at one end. The master bedroom suite with bedroom, exposed stone work to one wall, arch through to dressing room with extensive fitted glazed and oak wardrobes is located across the Georgian side of the property. A door to en-suite bathroom with hip bath and shower attachment, two basins on stone surround, Thomas Crapper WC and heated towel rail. There is also a large wet room with rain shower and tiled wall. Separate WC. On this floor there are three further double bedrooms one of which is currently used as a study, all with oak floors. A family bathroom with bath, basin, WC, tiled walls and oak floor. Laundry room with fitted units with composite worktops with Belfast sink and space for washing machines. Door to the outside. The secondary staircase rises to the second floor, with a landing leading to a gymnasium/ironing room with fitted sauna. The main staircase rises at the front of the house giving access to two further single bedrooms. The first one has an en-suite dressing room whilst the second bedroom has an en-suite shower room. This makes ideal children’s accommodation. There are also two large rooms currently used for storage. Outbuildings Situated adjoining the second driveway is a range of traditional buildings constructed of Cotswold stone under a Cotswold stone and tiled roof. These include garage, two stables a room used for the Biomass boiler with the adjoining garage used as a storage for pellets for the boiler. Gardener’s storeroom. Dowdeswell House Approximate Gross Internal Area House: 713 sq m (7,677 sq ft) Coach House: 181 sq m (1,945 sq ft) Total: 894 sq m (9,622 sq ft) Ground Floor First Floor APPROXIMATE GROSS INTERNAL FLOOR AREA House: 713 sq m (7,677 sq ft) Coach House: 181 sq m (1,945 sq ft) Total: 894 sq m (9,622 sq ft) First Floor Coach House Cellars Ground Floor Coach House Second Floor Gardens and Grounds The gardens are a particular feature of the property and the design takes full advantage of wonderful views. To the front of the house the formal gardens are terraced and landscaped to include herbaceous and shrub borders with gravel paths leading to a private garden to the side of the house with doors opening out from the kitchen. A large beech hedge separates off the swimming pool area and pool house which has an adjoining greenhouse. The swimming pool is one of the main features of the property being an infinity edge spring fed pool constructed of reclaimed Portland stone in a cruciform shape. The pool has an electric cover and extensive stone surround. Beyond the pool the infinity edge has a reed bed which does filtration of the pool. The whole area is private and quiet with exceptional views from the pool and its surrounds over the surrounding Cotswold Hills. With the wide stone surround it is an ideal location for sunbathing whilst also benefiting from the views. The pool house has changing rooms and W.C. From the swimming pool a gate leads down into the orchard and paddocks below with a number of fruit trees and the hard tennis court has a small stone pavilion adjoining it.
Recommended publications
  • Chedworth Roman Villa, Bibury & Northleach
    Chedworth Roman Villa, Bibury & Northleach Miles Step # Short Med Long Short, med & long routes: follow instructions below. 1 TR out of campsite 0 0 0 2 TL onto cycle path before RBT 0.1 0.1 0.1 3 Cross road, cycle down to u'pass & TR through u'pass. 0.2 0.2 0.2 4 TR at far end of u'pass 0.3 0.3 0.3 5 Take 1st exit off RBT SP Hatherley, then SO @ ASDA RBT SP Hatherley. 0.5 0.5 0.5 6 SO at next RBT 0.8 0.8 0.8 7 SO at RBT SP Up Hatherley & Bacon Theatre 0.9 0.9 0.9 8 TL at RBT into Hatherley Road SP Bacon Theatre 1.1 1.1 1.1 9 SO at double mini RBT to follow Hatherley Road 1.8 1.8 1.8 10 BL at mini RBT 2 2 2 11 TR into Hatherley Court Road 2.2 2.2 2.2 12 TR at TJ into St Stephen's Road (no nameplate, but post box on right) 2.4 2.4 2.4 13 TR at mini RBT into "The Park" (no nameplate but large white house on right) 2.6 2.6 2.6 14 Follow round "The Park". Beware unhelpful (dangerous) road narrowings! 2.7 2.7 2.7 15 TR at mini RBT into Moorend Park Road 2.9 2.9 2.9 16 SO at traffic lights 3 3 3 17 SO at RBT into Moorend Road 3.2 3.2 3.2 18 TR at TJ into Leckhampton Road (no nameplate).
    [Show full text]
  • Communications Roads Cheltenham Lies on Routes Connecting the Upper Severn Vale with the Cotswolds to the East and Midlands to the North
    DRAFT – VCH Gloucestershire 15 [Cheltenham] Communications Roads Cheltenham lies on routes connecting the upper Severn Vale with the Cotswolds to the east and Midlands to the north. Several major ancient routes passed nearby, including the Fosse Way, White Way and Salt Way, and the town was linked into this important network of roads by more local, minor routes. Cheltenham may have been joined to the Salt Way running from Droitwich to Lechlade1 by Saleweistrete,2 or by the old coach road to London, the Cheltenham end of which was known as Greenway Lane;3 the White Way running north from Cirencester passed through Sandford.4 The medieval settlement of Cheltenham was largely ranged along a single high street running south-east and north-west, with its church and manorial complex adjacent to the south, and burgage plots (some still traceable in modern boundaries) running back from both frontages.5 Documents produced in the course of administering the liberty of Cheltenham refer to the via regis, the king’s highway, which is likely to be a reference to this public road running through the liberty. 6 Other forms include ‘the royal way at Herstret’ and ‘the royal way in the way of Cheltenham’ (in via de Cheltenham). Infringements recorded upon the via regis included digging and ploughing, obstruction with timbers and dungheaps, the growth of trees and building of houses.7 The most important local roads were those running from Cheltenham to Gloucester, and Cheltenham to Winchcombe, where the liberty administrators were frequently engaged in defending their lords’ rights. Leland described the roads around Cheltenham, Gloucester and Tewkesbury as ‘subject to al sodeyne risings of Syverne, so that aftar reignes it is very foule to 1 W.S.
    [Show full text]
  • 7.11 Mid Cotswold Principal Settlements
    COTSWOLD DISTRICT LOCAL PLAN 2011-2031 71 Delivering the Strategy 7 7.11 Mid Cotswold - Principal Settlements (POLICY SA2) 7.11.1 The Mid-Cotswolds sub-area comprises: Andoversford Bourton-on-the-Water Northleach Stow-on-the-Wold Upper Rissington 7.11.2 Together these settlements provide day-to-day infrastructure, services and facilities for local residents and those living in the wider rural areas. Policy SA2 STRATEGIC DELIVERY - MID-COTSWOLDS SUB-AREA Within the context of Policy INF1, the strategic infrastructure requirements for the Mid-Cotswolds Sub-Area are: Highways Improvement of Unicorn junction (A436/B4068), Stow-on-the-Wold 7.12 Andoversford (POLICY S10) 7.12.1 Although Andoversford is not a large settlement, it has an above-average level of services and facilities for a village of its size. Importantly, it also has a well established industrial estate and good employment base. 7.12.2 Self-containment is low. This could be explained by the relatively close proximity of the village to Cheltenham. Also, bus services to neighbouring Cheltenham have improved and are convenient for commuting to work during normal hours. 7.12.3 Andoversford’s role as a local service and employment centre should be enhanced to help enable it to service a number of villages within a few miles’ radius, and reduce reliance on car travel to Cheltenham/ Charlton Kings to the west. Development will also help to enhance Andoversford’s potential role as a local service centre in an otherwise poorly-served part of the District. Additional house building will also address the relatively modest need for affordable housing in the Andoversford area.
    [Show full text]
  • Excluding Bank Holidays
    801 (v.1) Monday to Saturday (excluding Bank Holidays) From 14th November 2016 Moreton-in-Marsh - Stow-on-the-Wold - Bourton-on-the-Water - Northleach - Andoversford - Cheltenham M-F M-S M-S M-S M-S M-S M-S M-S M-S M-S M-S M-S Moreton Fire College Houses Turning Circle 06:50 07:55 09:15 10:45 12:15 13:45 15:00 16:30 17:40 18:45 19:50 Moreton-in-Marsh Railway Station 06:55 08:00 09:20 10:50 12:20 13:50 15:05 16:35 17:45 18:50 19:55 Moreton-in-Marsh Corn Exchange 07:00 08:05 09:25 10:55 12:25 13:55 15:10 16:40 17:50 18:55 20:00 Moreton-in-Marsh Surgery / Hospital 07:01 08:06 09:26 10:56 12:26 13:56 15:11 16:41 17:51 18:56 20:01 Ivy Lodge X Roads 07:05 08:10 09:30 11:00 12:30 14:00 15:15 16:45 17:55 19:00 20:05 Stow-on-the-Wold Market Square 07:10 08:20 09:40 11:10 12:40 14:10 15:25 16:55 18:05 19:05 20:10 Stow-on-the-Wold King Georges Field ~ 08:25 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Bourton on the Water Cotswold School 06:45 07:17 08:35 09:50 11:20 12:50 14:20 15:35 17:05 18:15 19:12 20:17 Bourton-on-the-Water Surgery / Hospital 06:46 07:18 08:36 09:51 11:21 12:51 14:21 15:36 17:06 18:16 19:13 20:18 Bourton-on-the-Water High St, arr 06:47 07:19 08:37 09:52 11:22 12:52 14:22 15:37 17:07 18:17 19:14 20:19 Bourton on the Water High St dep 06:50 07:20 08:40 09:55 11:30 12:55 14:30 15:40 17:10 Notgrove X Roads 06:55 ~ ~ 10:00 ~ 13:00 14:35 ~ ~ Northleach (Easington Road Junction) ~ 07:35 08:55 ~ 11:45 ~ ~ 15:55 17:25 Northleach Market Square arr ~ 07:37 08:57 ~ 11:47 ~ ~ 15:57 17:27 Northleach Market Square dep ~ 07:40 09:00 ~ 11:50 ~ ~ 16:00 17:30 Andoversford (Templefields) 07:08 07:55 09:15 10:13 12:05 13:13 14:48 16:15 17:45 Andoversford (Station Road Bus Stop) 07:10 07:57 09:17 10:15 12:07 13:15 14:50 16:17 17:47 East End 07:17 08:04 09:24 10:22 12:14 13:22 14:57 16:24 17:54 Charlton Kings Six Ways 07:19 08:06 09:26 10:24 12:16 13:24 14:59 16:26 17:56 Cheltenham - College Road opp General Hospital 07:25 08:12 09:32 10:30 12:22 13:30 15:05 16:32 18:02 M-F - Monday to Cheltenham Royal Well Bus Stn.
    [Show full text]
  • Corporate Climate Change Strategy & Action Plan
    Responding to Climate Change: Gloucestershire County Council’s Corporate Climate Change Strategy & Action Plan 2008/09 to 2011/12 July 2008 Gloucestershire County Council Responding to Climate Change: Gloucestershire County Council’s Corporate Climate Change Strategy & Action Plan Prepared by Gloucestershire County Council and CAG Consultants Approved by Cabinet, 9th July 2008 CAG CONSULTANTS Gordon House 6 Lissenden Gardens London NW5 1LX Tel/fax 020 7482 8882 [email protected] www.cagconsultants.co.uk For direct enquiries about this document please contact: Dr. Helen Chalmers, Senior Consultant, CAG Consultants tel 01691 828026 mob 07817 281273 [email protected] For more information about the Council’s climate change programme please contact: Peter Wiggins, Corporate Sustainability Manager, Gloucestershire County Council tel 01452 425189 [email protected] A Strategy & Action Plan for Responding to Climate Change Contents Contents 1 Foreword 5 Foreword by the Council 5 Response by the Council’s partners 6 Executive Summary: Responding to Climate Change 7 1. Gloucestershire and climate change 9 The ‘problem’ with climate change 9 The risks of climate change to Gloucestershire 9 Gloucestershire County Council’s impact on climate change 11 Financial and political pressures for change 13 A Gloucestershire approach 13 2. Gloucestershire County Council’s commitment to tackling climate change 15 Our vision 15 Our objectives 15 Our commitment 16 Our targets 17 Our future challenges 18 3. Our response to climate change 19 Our approach to leading action on climate change 19 Our priorities 20 Action plan 20 4. Monitoring and reporting 21 Performance indicators and targets 21 Monitoring 22 Reporting 22 5.
    [Show full text]
  • Dowdeswell Place Upper Dowdeswell • Andoversford
    Dowdeswell Place Upper Dowdeswell • Andoversford Dowdeswell Place Upper Dowdeswell Andoversford • GL54 4LT An impressive section of a Grade II Cotswold manor with beautiful gardens and a delightful stone barn Cheltenham 5 miles • Cirencester 13 miles Stroud 15 miles • M5 Jcn 11a 9 miles Main House Ground Floor: Entrance hall • Kitchen Breakfast room Utility • Drawing room • Dining room • Cloak room First Floor: Master bedroom with flexible partitioned area & en suite bathroom • Further bedroom Second Floor: 2 Bedrooms • Bathroom Period Barn Ground Floor: Office / studio • Open storage space First Floor: Open storage space Period Greenhouse • Formal gardens About 0.67 acre Situation Dowdeswell Place is the impressive south western section of the manor set in the heart of the well regarded village of Upper Dowdeswell. The property is Grade II listed and is situated in delightful private grounds and provides elegant accommodation within the house, set over three floors and further potential within the separate period stone barn section. Day to day shopping is found in nearby Charlton Kings with more comprehensive shopping found in Cheltenham and Gloucester. Intercity trains from Cheltenham reach Paddington in just over 2 hours and M5 Jcn 11a is about 9 miles away. The A417 provides fast access to Cirencester the A419 and Swindon and the M4 and the A40 across to Oxford and the M40. Description Dowdeswell Place is an attractive and impressive section of the manor. The property occupies the South Westerly part and enjoys a dedicated entrance driveway with parking area, leading to the house, period barn section and gardens. The property is believed to have been built in 1920 and blends in well with the original manor.
    [Show full text]
  • Dowdeswell House Lower Dowdeswell, Gloucestershire
    Dowdeswell House LOWER DOWDESWELL, GLOUCESTERSHIRE Dowdeswell House LOWER DOWDESWELL, GLOUCESTERSHIRE Cheltenham 4 miles • Kingham 15 miles (London Paddington 1½ hours) Cirencester 16 miles • Oxford M40 36 miles • Bristol 45 miles • Bristol International Airport 55 miles (Distances and time approximate) A beautifully proportioned 6/7 bedroom Listed Georgian house with cutting edge interiors, wonderful views, Infinity swimming pool, Tennis court and Sauna. Accommodation Reception hall • Drawing room • Dining room • Sitting room • Kitchen/breakfast room • Utility room Cold store • Boot room • Two cloakrooms Master bedroom suite with dressing room, en-suite bathroom and wet room Guest bedroom with bath • Three further double bedrooms • Family bathroom • Laundry room Second floor - two double bedrooms with en-suite bathroom, dressing room and store rooms • Further storage rooms Total area for the house and Coach House 9,622 sq ft (893.91 sq m) Traditional outbuildings providing stabling, garage, boiler room, workshop and stores and extensive loft space Spring fed infinity edge swimming pool • Tennis court • Sauna Terrace garden • Walled garden • Greenhouse • Pond • Orchard and paddock For sale freehold In all about 6.5 acres (2.63 hectares) Cirencester Country Department Gloucester House, 60 Dyer Street, 55 Baker Street, Cirencester, Gloucestershire GL7 2PT London W1U 8AN Tel: +44 1285 659 771 Tel: +44 20 7861 1707 [email protected] [email protected] www.knightfrank.co.uk These particulars are intended only as a guide and must not be relied upon as statements of fact. Your attention is drawn to the Important Notice on the last page of the brochure. Gloucestershire • Dowdeswell House is ideally located just outside Cheltenham with far reaching views across the Dowdeswell Valley to May Hill and the Welsh Hills beyond.
    [Show full text]
  • Summer Sunday
    801 (v.1) Summer Sunday Timetable (May to September inclusive) From 7th May 2017 Moreton-in-Marsh - Stow-on-the-Wold - Bourton-on-the-Water - Northleach - Andoversford - Cheltenham Moreton-in-Marsh Railway Station 11:45 15:30 18:20 Moreton-in-Marsh Corn Exchange 11:50 15:35 18:25 Moreton-in-Marsh Surgery/Hospital 11:51 15:36 18:26 Ivy Lodge X Roads 11:55 15:40 18:30 Stow-on-the-Wold Market Square 12:05 15:50 18:35 Stow-on-the-Wold King Georges Field ~ ~ ~ Bourton on the Water Cotswold School 12:19 16:04 18:44 Bourton-on-the-Water Surgery/Hospital 12:19 16:04 18:44 Bourton-on-the-Water High St, arr 12:20 16:05 18:45 Bourton on the Water High St dep 12:25 16:10 Notgrove X Roads 12:30 16:15 Northleach (Easington Road Junction) ~ ~ Northleach Market Square arr ~ ~ Northleach Market Square dep ~ ~ Andoversford (Templefields) ~ ~ Andoversford (Station Road Bus Stop) 12:42 16:27 East End 12:49 16:34 Charlton Kings Six Ways 12:51 16:36 Cheltenham - College Road opp General Hospital ~ ~ Cheltenham Royal Well Bus Stn. Stand E 13:00 16:45 801 (v.1) Summer Sunday Timetable (May to September inclusive) From 7th May 2017 Cheltenham - Andoversford - Northleach - Bourton-on-the-Water - Stow-on-the-Wold - Moreton-in-Marsh Cheltenham Royal Well Bus Stn. Stand E Depart 13:15 17:00 Cheltenham - College Road General Hospital ~ ~ Charlton Kings - Six Ways 13:23 17:08 East End 13:25 17:10 Andoversford (Station Road Bus Stop) 13:32 17:17 Andoversford (Templefields) ~ ~ Northleach (Easington Road Junction) ~ ~ Northleach Market Square, arr.
    [Show full text]
  • COTSWOLD DISTRICT LOCAL PLAN 2011-2031 (Adopted 3 August 2018)
    COTSWOLD DISTRICT LOCAL PLAN 2011-2031 (Adopted 3 August 2018) In memory of Tiina Emsley Principal Planning Policy Officer from 2007 to 2012 COTSWOLD DISTRICT LOCAL PLAN 2011-2031 Contents 1 Introduction 6 2 Portrait 11 3 Issues 17 4 Vision 20 5 Objectives 21 6 Local Plan Strategy 23 6.1 Development Strategy (POLICY DS1) 23 6.2 Development Within Development Boundaries (POLICY DS2) 29 6.3 Small-Scale Residential Development in Non-Principal Settlements (POLICY DS3) 30 6.4 Open Market Housing Outside Principal and Non-Principal Settlements (POLICY DS4) 32 7 Delivering the Strategy 34 7.1 South Cotswold - Principal Settlements (POLICY SA1) 37 7.2 Cirencester Town (POLICY S1) 38 7.3 Strategic Site, south of Chesterton, Cirencester (POLICY S2) 44 7.4 Cirencester Central Area (POLICY S3) 47 7.5 Down Ampney (POLICY S4) 54 7.6 Fairford (POLICY S5) 57 7.7 Kemble (POLICY S6) 60 7.8 Lechlade (POLICY S7) 63 7.9 South Cerney (POLICY S8) 66 7.10 Tetbury (POLICY S9) 68 7.11 Mid Cotswold - Principal Settlements (POLICY SA2) 71 7.12 Andoversford (POLICY S10) 71 7.13 Bourton-on-the-Water (POLICY S11) 74 7.14 Northleach (POLICY S12) 77 7.15 Stow-on-the-Wold (POLICY S13) 80 7.16 Upper Rissington (POLICY S14) 82 Planning applications will be determined in accordance with relevant policies in this Local Plan, which should be considered together, unless material considerations indicate otherwise. COTSWOLD DISTRICT LOCAL PLAN 2011-2031 Contents 7.17 North Cotswold - Principal Settlements (POLICY SA3) 84 7.18 Blockley (POLICY S15) 85 7.19 Chipping Campden (POLICY
    [Show full text]
  • Syreford Mill: the Finds 327
    Syreford Mill: The Finds 327 1.31 1.30 . ' ; ' ,, I I I If 11 lt 0 50mm 1.37 1.38 0- e 9• --~.. I ~ Fig 138 Brooches. Scale 1:1 triple moulded element, below a double one and, on each ent cross-flute with cross-cut borders under a narrower side, a wing with a vertical moulding and ending in a boss. section with three cross-mouldings. Under it only one The lower bow has two groups of three cross-mouldings cross-moulding survives. W L Cox Collection, no 30. and a plain bossed foot-knob. Andoversford Bypass, no 21, 31 Fig 138 Here the bow has a continuous taper to the AN-RN. separately made foot-knob with, between bordering ridges, 30 Fig 138 A fragment only, the upper bow has a promin- three ridges divided by narrow flues which are filled with 328 Excavations at Kingscote and Wycomb, Gloucestershire ==z ) I, ( ·- ,_,2 ~ 1 I 10 I I,, ~ 114 ( 1 ( @. ' 118 ) ( 1,7 =r ' \ ' ,_ \20 \ ' F--===? ~ ~~~· (~23 c ( 21 122 s ~-1 ~26 I 24 l-~25 J o··...• : . ·~32 29 0 100 mm Fig 139 Pottery. Scale 1:4 Syreford Mill: The Finds 329 what seems to be a non-metallic material which has silvered. For discussion, see after Brooch 155. Syreford Mill, beading along it. Syreford Mill, A2, topsoil, SF 61. For SF 65. discussion, see after Kingscote Brooch 141, p 140. 34 Fig 138 All that survives is the rounded top of a plate Strip which may have had ogival sides and which was recessed for enamel or millefiore.
    [Show full text]
  • Councillor Submissions to the Cotswold Council Electoral Review
    Councillor submissions to the Cotswold Council electoral review This PDF document contains 4 submissions from Councillors. Some versions of Adobe allow the viewer to move quickly between bookmarks. Click on the submission you would like to view. If you are not taken to that page, please scroll through the document. Dear Sir. I write in support of the Compton Abdale Parish Meeting who have written asking for Compton Abdale to be placed in the new Chedworth and Churn Valley ward of Cotswold District Council. For the past 10 years I have been the Cotswold District Councillor for the Chedworth Ward covering Chedworth, Compton Abdale, Dowdeswell, Withington and Yanworth. I am indeed the only person who has been CDC Councillor for the Chedworth Ward as prior to my election Withington and Dowdeswell were in Sandywell Ward while Chedworth, Compton Abdale and Yanworth were in Fossehill Ward. Having attended the vast majority of Parish Council meetings and Parish Meetings at Withington, Yanworth, Dowdeswell Chedworth and Compton Abdale during that time, I must say that the issues facing Compton Abdale generally mirror those facing Chedworth and Yanworth rather than those facing Withington and Dowdeswell. Compton Abdale has close links with Yanworth to the East. Much of Compton Abdale parish and almost all of Yanworth parish as well as much of the northern part of Chedworth parish is in the ownership of the Stowell Park estate. Stowell Park was historically the seat of Lord Chedworth and the social and cultural links have continued to this day. The three Parishes were included in the same section of the 1804 Inclosure award map for this reason and have continued to be within the same CDC Ward since the formation of the Cotswold District Council in 1973/4.
    [Show full text]
  • HAY, STRAW and FODDER
    STOW-ON-THE-WOLD GLOUCESTERSHIRE —oOo— SALE BY AUCTION OF APPROX 2,500 TONNES OF HAY, STRAW and FODDER on FRIDAY 12th FEBRUARY 2016 Commencing at 12noon (subject to the Conditions of Sale) at STOW-ON-THE-WOLD RUGBY CLUB ODDINGTON ROAD STOW-ON-THE-WOLD, GLOS, GL54 1AH www.taylerandfletcher.co.uk SALE NOTES PLACE OF SALE - THE CLUB ROOM, STOW-ON-THE-WOLD RUGBY CLUB GROUND, situated one mile from Stow-on-the-Wold on the Chipping Norton Road (A436). Stow-on-the-Wold (on the Fosseway - A429) is 18 miles from Cheltenham, 10 miles from Chipping Norton and 18 miles from Cirencester. BIDDING NUMBERS – Please note that these will be used. Please register on arrival at the sale room. THE SALE - Unless otherwise stated, all lots comprise baled Hay & Straw from the 2015 season. VIEWING - may be at any time during daylight hours by prospective purchasers in possession of a Sale Catalogue. Appointments are not necessary, unless specifically indicated in the Catalogue. HELP TO LOAD – unless specifically indicated in the catalogue or at time of sale HELP TO LOAD WILL BE AVAILABLE providing at least 24 hours notice is given in order that arrangements can be made. Help to load is limited to the 28 day removal period or such extended period as agreed to by the Vendor under these Conditions of Sale. Private arrangements for an extension of the removal period beyond that stated in the catalogue or announced at the time of sale are strictly a matter between Vendor and Purchaser and we recommend that confirmation is obtained in writing or by email.
    [Show full text]