Presentation Notes

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Presentation Notes THE GREENSAND COUNTRY: SANDSTONE STRUCTURES 30-35 SECONDS PER SLIDE Presentation to Diocese of St. Alban: Church Architects + Surveyors Summer Workshop COMPOSITION 06 INTRODUCTION (TITLE PAGE) 01 Quartz (silica) particles = 0.07-2.0mm TALK Most particles unconsolidated or weakly bound About how sandstone plays a part in the character of the Greensand Country 02 … much of rock is sand = useful only as an aggregated Going to deal with: Some horizons towards upper levels • PROPERTIES OF THE STONE …. tightly bound with more quartz and iron oxides = can yield a reasonable building • SOURCES stone • HISTORIC USAGE GENERALLY …. Albeit discontinuous and irregular • ITS USE IN MINOR SANDSTONE STRUCTURES, MAINLY WALLS Highly variable stone = careful selection … ending with an overview of how such structures are vulnerable to loss, etc. DURABILITY 07 … hence providing context for Claire to talk in more detail about …. Cemented BACKGROUND • HIGH PERCENTAGE QUARTZ = HARD & DURABLE Based on AUDIT of minor sandstone structures + their context carried out in 2015 • HIGH IRON OXIDE = FRIABLE & PRONE TO EROSION … one of a number of studies that fed into Landscape Conservation Action Plan Harder stones for building; more friable for boundary walls, etc. … its aim being to: Bedding … general comment • INCREASE UNDERSTANDING OF THE ROLE PLAYED BY MINOR SANDSTONE • DETERMINES MAXIMUM SIZE OF STONE & WAY IT IS USED STRUCTURES & THEIR CONTEXT IN THE DISTINCTIVE CHARACTER OF THE GREENSAND LANDSCAPE. COLOUR 08 • IDENTIFY HOW SURVIVAL IS THREATENED Regardless of how the rock is cemented …. iron rich compound • PROVIDE IN A RESPONSE A CONSERVATION STRATEGY … adds up to a range of colours: Rusty ochre – brown Limitations Ironstone • DID NOT DEAL WITH MINOR GARDEN FEATURES • GENERIC TERM FOR MANY IRON-RICH STONES • COVERED THE WHOLE OF THE GREENSAND AREA + KILOMETRE BUFFER • INCLUDING LIMESTONES = SHENLEY HILL • EXCLUDED THE URBAN AREAS OF LEIGHTON BUZZARD + LINSLADE • NOT TO DENIGRATE LOOSE USAGE OF THE TERM METHODOLOGY Other minerals • GLAUCONITE = IRON-POTASSIUM SILICATE Literature review 03 • HUSBORNE CRAWLEY CHURCH Field survey 04 • UPPER AND LOWER GREENSAND CONFUSION Analysis WORKABILITY 09 PROPERTIES … WHAT ARE WE TALKING ABOUT? Usable stone is not a freestone despite small particle size • DIFFICULT TO CARVE GEOLOGY 05 • RARELY USED FOR MOULDINGS OR COMPLEX DETAILS Underlying 120 metre thick layer of sedimentary rock • CANNOT BE WORKED AS ASHLAR • DISTINCTION BETWEEN ROCK AND STONE Always used as Rubble Laid down 110 to 125 million years ago • RANDOM & SQUARED; SOMETIMES COURSED Generally hidden by layers of clay and other soils Often combined with other materials 10 Historically known as the Lower Greensand … • TOTTERNHOE STONE; PEBBLES, RIVER COBBLES (IVEL), ETC. … though more correctly the WOBURN SANDS FORMATION Page 1 of 3 THE GREENSAND COUNTRY: SANDSTONE STRUCTURES 30-35 SECONDS PER SLIDE Presentation to Diocese of St. Alban: Church Architects + Surveyors Summer Workshop SOURCES … WHERE DID IT COME FROM? OTHERWISE … IN TERMS OF OCCUPIED BUILDINGS 18 Some early cottages QUARRIES 11 • CLOPHILL (STONE JUG) & POTSGROVE Some identified on Strategic Stone Study New churches • DOES NOT YET COVER BUCKINGHAMSHIRE OR CAMBRIDGESHIRE • SILSOE (1829-31); CLOPHILL (1848-9); LIDDLINGTON (1886) Old maps … 12 4 x schools … sand and stone pits; quarries; interchangeable • POTSGROVE (1897-8), ASPLEY GUISE (1847-50), STEPPINGLEY (1877-8) ; POTTON (1896-8) DELVES 13 Lodges to parkland Cannot use used – Planning Permission, etc. • WOBURN, WREST, HAYNES PARK, SOUTHILL & HAZELLS CURRENT SUPPLIES Other buildings All mainly aggregate, often on massive scale • SUTTON PARK HOUSE (1858) NOW JOHN O’GAUNT GOLF CLUB 19 • NEW SPRING PUMPING STATION, ENGINE HOUSE & PUMP MASTER’S HO. (1906) 20 Two known to provide dimensioned stone • CAINHOE + HEATH & REACH SUMMARY 21 Reference to APPENDIX C OF REPORT In all, less than 50 occupied sandstone buildings in or near the Greensand Country USAGE … HISTORY This is compared to 43 churches that are in whole or in part sandstone … 22 … including further afield there are 71 sandstone churches + chapels CHURCHES 14 Churches aside, the contribution of sandstone to the character and identity of the Many of medieval foundation … Greensand Country = clusters of MINOR STRUCTURES, primarily walls. 23 … but little medieval stone, at least externally. MINOR SANDSTONE STRUCTURES 19th (some 20th) century … … restoration TYPOLOGY • MILLBROOK (1857-8); LITTLE BRICKHILL (1864-5); HUSBORNE CRAWLEY (1911) Walls but also: … rebuilding • UNOCCUPIED FARM BUILDINGS 24 • STEPPINGLEY (1858-60); MAULDEN (1858-9) • BRIDGES 25 Externally, some survival • MISCELLANEOUS 26 • TOWERS: HUSBORNE CRAWLEY, HAYNES + EVERTON And to give an idea of numbers … 27 • RUINS: SEGENHOE + CLOPHILL, OLD ST. MARY 15 … 505 minor structures identified (since then …) of which 91% are WALLS 28 PRE-19TH CENTURY Of which 17% are of SQUARED rubble: 29 No major examples other than … • UNCOURSED (1%) • SNECKED (5&) … rear part of Woburn Lower School (16th century, restored c.1830) • BROUGHT TO COURSES (22%) Bridges • REGULARLY COURSED (72%) • MEDIEVAL @ SUTTON 16 83% RANDOM rubble: 30 • 18TH CENTURY BRIDGES: GIRTFORD 17 • UNCOURSED (51%) • LESSER BRIDGES OVER THE FLITT (CHICKSANDS) & SOUTHILL LANDSCAPE • COURSED (29%) • BLUNHAM & TEMPSFORD BRIDGES – THE LODGE QUARRY • POLYGONAL (14%) • ABUTMENTS OF IVEL NAVIGATION BRIDGES – BROOM • DIAGONAL OR HERRINGBONE (6%) Page 2 of 3 THE GREENSAND COUNTRY: SANDSTONE STRUCTURES 30-35 SECONDS PER SLIDE Presentation to Diocese of St. Alban: Church Architects + Surveyors Summer Workshop Various types of coping … 31 VULNERABILITY … about 35% walls are retaining CONDITION 37 … most low, many with openings Generally good … and – as buildings - used with other materials Important to understand that walls are not buildings = criteria for assessment DISTRIBUTION 32 … different to looking at walls in buildings Greensand County … CONSERVATION ISSUES • CUTS ACROSS THREE COUNTIES Loss • EMBRACING 55 CIVIL PARISHES 38 • FALLS WITHIN THE CONTROL OF 6 X LOCAL AUTHORITIES – 81% OF AREA CBC • DELIBERATE OR ACCIDENTAL However, this does not reflect distribution … Neglect 39 • ONLY 34 PARISHES • FREESTANDING AND RETAINING WALLS MORE EXPOSED … OF WHICH 18 = 5+ AND ONLY 11 = 10+ • LOSS AND DETERIORATION OF COPINGS Authority split = nearly 35% in Buckinghamshire • LACK OF USE: UNOCCUPIED FARM BUILDINGS 40 • GREENSAND COUNTRY IS NOT JUST ABOUT BEDFORDSHIRE! • UNMANAGED VEGETATION 41 DISTRIBUTION BY LOCATION 33 Salts 42 … 3 x major concentrations … not generally a problem in an unpolluted mainly rural environment, but: … tends to related to local supply of stone (pit as well as quarries) • DE-ICING SALTS (ROADS & PAVEMENTS) 43 … nature of stone determines how used: • GROUND WATER: RETAINING WALLS + BURIAL GROUNDS (5%; 10-12 YEARS) 44 • DIAGONAL + HERRINGBONE IN POTTON AREA • ROAD SALTS & GROUNDWATER 45 • SQUARED RUBBLE CONCENTRATED IN CENTRAL AREA (CLOPHILL, SILSOE) Inappropriate repairs • RANDOM RUBBLE BROUGHT TO THIN COURSES = BUCKINGHAMSHIRE • CEMENT POINTING: ADDS TO THE SALTS PROBLEM 46 DENSE & LOOSE CONCENTRATIONS 34 • FAILED CEMENT POINTING 47 Dense clusters 35 • FAILURE OF LIME MORTARS: LACK OF UNDERSTANDING • HEATH & REACH; GREAT BRICKHILL; LITTLE BRICKHILL; • STRETCHED COPINGS 48 BOW BRICKHILL; SILSOE; CLOPHILL • ILL MATCHED REPAIRS 49 Loose clusters • POOR WORKMANSHIP: SMEARING EXAMPLE 50 • FLITTON; MAULDEN; POTTON Also small but significant GROUPINGS BUT IT CAN BE DONE … 51 • OVEREND GREEN; POTSGROVE; STEPPINGLEY … END ON POSITIVE NOTE Church groupings BACK TO CLAIRE … 52 … RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CHURCH & WALL IS ALWAYS IMPORTANT LOCAL DISTINCTIVENESS 36 Generally modest in scale and largely self-effacing Location is crucial The way in which stone is used is highly localised Groupings and context are important BELONG IN SOME PLACES BUT NOT OTHERS Page 3 of 3 .
Recommended publications
  • Flitwick, Ampthill and Cranfield Bus Timetable 6 Meppersha Meppersha 79.89 Moggerhan a X 61.321 W1 X Biggleswade Y Luton Airport W2
    Lavendon Oakley A421 G rea Stevington t O Clapham 0 us 6 e 6 Renhold B Salph B565 1A End Turvey Gre A4 Bedford Great 112X at Ou 28 se 1A Bus Station Bedford Barford Cold Corn Exchange I5X 1A.1C.M1.S1.V1.J2 Bedford Bedford For further details in the Bedford area, Brayfield X I6X M2.V2X.M3.M4 River Street Horne Lane W1X.W2X please see separate publicity I7 1A X 1C R2X produced by Bedford Borough Council I6X I7 1A Bromham 42.44.160X.165X I5X R3X F5X.F8X X5 I5X I7X I6X A I5X er & Newton 6 Goldington X5 Museum X5 se I5X A4 1 Ou 2 A428 2 Great 8 Bedford 4 Willington 22 Biddenham I5X A Willington 4 X5 Riverfield Road Dovecote A X5 1A Queen’s Park Bedford Museum Tesco ton 1C Station Cardington Road R2X 1C I6X.I7X M3 I5X M3 Kempston Tesco 1C Great Williamson Court F8X Stagsden Denham A603 X5 R1X.R2X Box 3 M3X Moggerhang R2X A60 End Cople A V1 X A I5X 5 V2 4444 6 M4 1 0 X 3 RR22X 4422 0 M3 4 KKempstonempston FF55X S1 R3R3X Astwood J2J2 Cardington M4 F8X S1 M1.M2X.M3 M1 Wood End R1X 30 44 M2 R2X 5 M4.W1X.W2X Gibraltar B W1X 422 R2X 160X 1A A 165X W2X F8X 1 Elstow X5 Wood End V1V2X A42 1C R2X R1X.R2X Shortstown Chicheley V1 JJ22 RR33•X 4422 V2X R2X Hall End V2X A Cotton V1X Chicheley 6 Wootton FF55X End Hall North S1 J2 44 Biggleswade Crawley X A FF88 6 V2X 0 PLUSBUS Zone 1A Bourne 4422 0 1 End KKempstonempston Wixams X5 V1 HHardwickardwick SStationtation Old 1 R3X Upper M1 Warde 17 160X M2 Shelton R1X J2 17AX 165X W1X Cranfield V2X F5X University Wharley W2X Old W V2X R3X R1X 160X F8X End R3X X R1X R3X V1 R1X Stewartby 42 Wilstead V1.V2 V1 I1A A
    [Show full text]
  • 19.00041 Report.Pdf
    APPLICATION NUMBER CB/19/00041/REG3 LOCATION Former Flitwick Leisure Centre Steppingley Road Flitwick PROPOSAL Application for Outline planning permission with all matters reserved for the construction of 37 residential dwellings (Use Class C3), 95 extra care housing apartments (Use Class C3) and registered residential care home consisting of 70 bedrooms (Use Class C2), with associated communal facilities and ancillary uses including hair salon; shop; cafe; health; and fitness uses. PARISH Flitwick WARD Flitwick WARD COUNCILLORS Cllrs Mrs Chapman, Gomm & Turner CASE OFFICER Benjamin Tracy DATE REGISTERED 03 January 2019 EXPIRY DATE 04 April 2019 APPLICANT Central Bedfordshire Council AGENT Hamson Barron Smith REASON FOR COMMITTEE TO The Council own the freehold of the site and DETERMINE objections have been received. RECOMMENDED DECISION Outline Application - Recommended for Approval Reason for Recommendation The site is located within the settlement envelope of Flitwick and upon previously developed land, whereby the principle of the proposed development is supported. The proposed development has been considered against the development plan policies and the three objectives of sustainability, which are the social, environmental and economic objectives, to determine whether the development would be sustainable and the benefits would outweigh any identified negative impacts. The benefits of development include the provision of specialist accommodation to positively contribute towards the Councils housing need whilst providing temporary jobs during construction and providing employment generating uses. It is considered that the latter benefits would outweigh any harm identified. For their reasons outlined within this report, the application is recommended for approval subject to conditions. Site Location: The site is located on previously developed land to the northeast of Steppingley Road, Flitwick.
    [Show full text]
  • Central Bedfordshire Prospectus June 2012
    Central Bedfordshire Prospectus June 2012 “Realising the area’s economic potential to be globally connected, deliver sustainable growth, ensuring a green, prosperous and ambitious place for the benefit of all” Contents of Prospectus Page No Glossary of Terms 3 Introduction 4 Key Attributes 6 Map of Central Bedfordshire 7 Population & Demographics 8 Housing 11 Deprivation 12 Economy 14 Children & Young People 16 Stronger & Safer Communities 17 Community Safety Partnership 21 Community Safety Delivery 23 Structure of the Community Safety Partnership 25 AppendixA 26 2 Acronym Description ASB Anti-Social Behaviour ASBRAC ASB Risk Assessment Conference BBC Bedford Borough Council BDAAT Bedfordshire Drugs and Alcohol Action Team CBC Central Bedfordshire Council CBT Central Bedfordshire Together, the name for the Local Strategic Partnership in Central Bedfordshire CSP CommunitySafetyPartnership DCLG Department for Communities and Local Government DFE DepartmentforEducation DWP Department for Work and Pensions EU EuropeanUnion HWB Health & Wellbeing Board IDVA Independent Domestic Violence Advisor IOM IntegratedOffenderManagement JSA Job Seekers Allowance JSNA Joint Strategic Needs Assessment LBC Luton Borough Council LSCB Local Safeguarding Children’s Board LSOAs LowerSuperOutputAreas MARAC Multi-Agency Risk Assessment Conference MINI Mental Illness Index MYE Mid Year Estimate NEET Not in Education, Employment or Training ONS Office for National Statistics SARAC Sexual Abuse Risk Assessment Conference 3 Introduction Central Bedfordshire Prospectus This prospectus has been developed by Central Bedfordshire Together, which is the name for our local strategic partnership (CBT). CBT comprises senior representatives from the Council, Police, Fire, Health, Education, Business, Town and Parish Councils and the Voluntary and Community Sector. This prospectus is intended to raise understanding and awareness for anyone standing as a candidate for the Bedfordshire Police and Crime Commissioner.
    [Show full text]
  • Dear Mr Griffiths Freedom of Information Request Further to Your
    Mr G Griffiths request-261315- Our ref: FOI2258 2014-15MJ [email protected] Date: 28 April 2015 Dear Mr Griffiths Freedom of Information Request Further to your request received on 31 March 2015, please see Central Bedfordshire Council’s response to your questions below: Q1. How you request your DBS Checks currently? Paper or Online? A1. DBS checks are currently requested in paper form. Q2. Do you use a third party or request them direct with the DBS? A2. We request DBS checks directly. Q3. If you use a third party, which company is it? When did you start using them? How much do you pay per Enhanced Disclosure? Is the provider decided by a tender process, if not who is the individual within the council that makes the decision? A3. We do not use a third party provider. Q4. How many DBS checks did you request between 1st Jan 14 – 31st Dec 14? A4. We requested 1,485 DBS checks between 1st Jan – 31st Dec 2014. Q5. Do you provide an umbrella body service to organisations? A5. We do provide an umbrella service to other organisations. Q6. If so, please can you list the names of the organisations. Please include a primary contact name and telephone. A6. Please see the table below: Central Bedfordshire Council Please reply to: Telephone 0300 300 8301 Access to Information Team Email [email protected] Central Bedfordshire Council www.centralbedfordshire.gov.uk Priory House, Monks Walk, Chicksands, Shefford, Bedfordshire SG17 5TQ Co/org/team/sch Address Tel No Email ool name 11 North Parade Greyfriars 24-7 Cars 01234 511247 Bedford MK40 1JF 113a Midland Road Mrs Jan - 07861 jan_3starcars@btinternet 3 Star Cars Bedford 667588 .com MK40 1DA 01234 333333 Three Star (Luton) Ltd Unit 1 3 star coaches Guardian Business Park Dallow Rd Luton LU1 1 26 Bedford Square, 69ers Dunstable, LU5 5ES 01582 696969 Waz 07540 696969 27a Tavistock Street [email protected].
    [Show full text]
  • The Evaluation of Bedfordshire Burial Registration, L538-L851
    The evaluation of Bedfordshire burial registration, L538-L851 Peter Razzell, Christine Spence and Matthew Woollard Abstract This article is based mainly on a digital transcript of burials for 126 Bedfordshire parishes 7538-7851, and a county index of wills for the same period. The comparison of probate with burial register data indicated that there uas little long-term change oaer time in burial tmder-registratiott, with between 21 and 27 per cent of utill entries missing in the registers. There was also little aariation between parishes of dffirent population sizes, suggesting that burial tmder-registratiot'L was predominantly a random process linked to clerical negligence. A comparison of 1841 and L851 census data, linked to the Bedfordshire burial database, reaealed thnt missing burials amongst married couples was 29 per cent, similar to that found in the probatelburial register comparison in the 1840s. These findings on the adequacy of burial registers -saggesf thnt similar resesrch on others counties will be necessary in order to establish reliable conclusions about England's population history. Introduction One of the major issues of historical demography has been the reliability of Anglican parish registers and its relationship to English population history in the period 1538-1850.1 Assumptions about the reliability of registers have had a major effect on the interpretation of population change, and this has had a significant impact on the debate about the nature of population growth during the 'parish register period'. Much of the uncertainty about demographic change is due to the inflation factors used for the correction of missing births and deaths in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
    [Show full text]
  • Area D Assessments
    Central Bedfordshire Council www.centralbedfordshire.gov.uk Appendix D: Area D Assessments Central Bedfordshire Council Local Plan Initial Settlements Capacity Study CENTRAL BEDFORDSHIRE COUNCIL LOCAL PLAN: INITIAL SETTLEMENTS CAPACITY STUDY Appendix IID: Area D Initial Settlement Capacity Assessment Contents Table BLUNHAM .................................................................................................................. 1 CAMPTON ................................................................................................................. 6 CLIFTON ................................................................................................................... 10 CLOPHILL ................................................................................................................. 15 EVERTON .................................................................................................................. 20 FLITTON & GREENFIELD ............................................................................................ 24 UPPER GRAVENHURST ............................................................................................. 29 HAYNES ................................................................................................................... 33 LOWER STONDON ................................................................................................... 38 MAULDEN ................................................................................................................ 42 MEPPERSHALL .........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Central Bedfordshire Educational Planning Areas
    Central Bedfordshire Council www.centralbedfordshire.gov.uk Central Bedfordshire Educational Planning Areas Biggleswade / Sandy Rural Mid-Bedfordshire Leighton Buzzard / Linslade Dunstable / Houghton Regis Area 1 – Dunstable and Houghton Regis Nursery Westfield (C) Willow (C) Lower/Primary Beecroft (A); Eaton Bray (A) Caddington Village (C, T) St Christopher’s (A, T) Lancot (A, T); Tottenhoe (A,T ) Slip End (C,T) Hadrian (A) Hawthorn Park (C) St Augustine’s (A) Ardley Hill (A) Houghton Regis (C) Kensworth (CE,A T) Dunstable Icknield (C) Tithe Farm (C) Studham (CE VC) Larkrise (A)Watling (C) Thornhill (C) Voluntary Aided (VA) School’s operating outside of catchments: Ashton St Peters (CE VA), St Mary's (Cadd) (RC VA), St Vincent’s (RC A), Thomas Whitehead (A, T) Middle (deemed Secondary) The Vale (A, T) Priory (A) Secondary All Saints Academy (A,T) Manshead (A, T) Queensbury (A,T) Houghton Regis Academy (A, T) The Academy of Central Bedfordshire (A, dual school Site 1) Special The Chiltern (C) Weatherfield (A) Total: Nursery 2, Lower/Primary 23, Middle (deemed Sec) 2, Upper 5, Special 2 – total 34 Key: (C) – Community School, CE/RC VC – Voluntary Controlled, A – Academy (non LA maintained), Fed – Member of Federation, CE/RC VA – Voluntary Aided, F – Foundation, T – Trust February 2019 Central Bedfordshire Educational Planning Areas Biggleswade / Sandy Rural Mid-Bedfordshire Leighton Buzzard / Linslade Dunstable / Houghton Regis Area 2 – Leighton Buzzard and Linslade Lower/Primary The Mary Bassett (C); Stanbridge (C) Clipstone Brook (C);
    [Show full text]
  • South Bedfordshire Intergroup Meetings
    South Bedfordshire Intergroup Meetings Leighton Buzzard Chaired Online Harlington Open Sunday Luton Stopsley Big Book Monday Sunday Harlington Parish Rooms, Church Rd Wigmore Church & Community Centre, Crawley Green Crombie House, 36 Hockliffe St Time: 19.00 - duration 1hr Rd, Stopsley, No refreshments available, please bring Time: 19.30 - duration 1hr 30mins Postcode: LU5 6LE your own Postcode: LU7 1HJ UID: 3089 Hand sanitiser available UID: 107 This physical meeting has opened up again Please wear face coverings Social distancing seating Time: 19.00 - duration 1hr 30mins Postcode: LU2 9TE UID: 108 This physical meeting has opened up again Luton Tuesday Leighton Buzzard Newcomers Leighton Buzzard Big Book Strathmore Avenue Methodist church, 43 Strathmore Online Tuesday Tuesday Ave Crombie House, 36 Hockliffe St Astral Park Community Centre, Johnson Drive, Time: 13.00 - duration 1hr Time: 20.00 - duration 1hr Postcode: LU1 3NZ Postcode: LU7 1HJ Time: 20.00 - duration 1hr UID: 6805 UID: 5215 Postcode: LU7 4AY This physical meeting has opened up again UID: 5951 This physical meeting has opened up again Dunstable 12 Step Recovery Luton Lewsey Farm Wednesday Leighton Buzzard Newcomers Online Tuesday St Hugh's Church, Leagrave High St Wednesday United Reformed Church Hall, Edward St Time: 20.00 - duration 1hr The Salvation Army, Lamass Walk, Visitors need to Time: 20.00 - duration 1hr Postcode: LU4 0ND contact us on email: Postcode: LU6 1HE UID: 5923 [email protected] if UID: 102 This physical meeting has opened up again
    [Show full text]
  • Harlington to Flitwick Harlington Circular
    Harlington to Flitwick Harlington Circular 1st walk check 2nd walk check 3rd walk check 1st walk check 2nd walk check 3rd walk check 05th July 2014 23rd Feb. 2019 09th January 2016 Current status Document last updated Saturday, 05th December 2020 This document and information herein are copyrighted to Saturday Walkers’ Club. If you are interested in printing or displaying any of this material, Saturday Walkers’ Club grants permission to use, copy, and distribute this document delivered from this World Wide Web server with the following conditions: • The document will not be edited or abridged, and the material will be produced exactly as it appears. Modification of the material or use of it for any other purpose is a violation of our copyright and other proprietary rights. • Reproduction of this document is for free distribution and will not be sold. • This permission is granted for a one-time distribution. • All copies, links, or pages of the documents must carry the following copyright notice and this permission notice: Saturday Walkers’ Club, Copyright © 2014-2020, used with permission. All rights reserved. www.walkingclub.org.uk This walk has been checked as noted above, however the publisher cannot accept responsibility for any problems encountered by readers. Harlington to Flitwick Start: Harlington Station Finish: Flitwick station Harlington station, map reference TL 034 303, is 11 km north of Luton and 92 m above sea level, Flitwick station, map reference TL 034 349, is 5 km north of Harlington and 79 m above sea level. Both are in Central Bedfordshire. Length: 24.5 km (15.2 mi), of which 6.4 km (4.0 mi) on tarmac or concrete.
    [Show full text]
  • Husborne Crawley Parish Council Objections to Central Bedfordshire Council Local Plan 2035 Further Consultation August 2020
    Husborne Crawley Parish Council objections to Central Bedfordshire Council Local plan 2035 further consultation August 2020 Marston Gate Expansion: Policy SE2 1. Despite the very clear concerns from the Inspectors, Policy SE2, remains as an allocated site to build a warehouse and distribution centre. It is situated principally in the Parish of Ridgmont, but it is also partly in the parishes of Brogborough, Husborne Crawley, Aspley Guise and Lidlington. All five parishes are affected by this proposal in that the site is located in the heart of the nationally important Greensand Ridge country, the setting for numerous heritage assets with numerous public rights of way, notably the Greensand Ridge itself and the John Bunyan Trail. 2. The overall area of the land to be occupied by warehousing, and distribution centre is 35 hectares, equivalent to about 80 football pitches. The site will be four times larger than the existing Marston Gate and will operate 24x7. The height of the buildings will be 18.5 – 21m high, with all the incumbent light and noise pollution. 3. The current Marston Gate Industrial Park was built on the site of the old brickworks, designated as brownfield. The allocation Policy SE2 will necessitate building on open land adjacent to the Greensand Ridge public footpaths and the John Bunyan Trail footpath will actually cross the site; south of the railway line has always been regarded as the buffer of protecting urban sprawl into countryside and should be retained as such. 4. This policy if adopted would allow the expansion of the Marston Gate distribution park onto a new site to the east of the existing complex – further away from Junction 13, on the other side of the Bletchley-to-Bedford railway line, and into open countryside.
    [Show full text]
  • Post-Christmas Delivery Dates
    Post-Christmas Delivery Dates Tuesday 29 December Arlesey Langford Aspley Guise Lower Stondon Bassingbourn Melbourn Beeston Meldreth Biggleswade Milton Keynes Bletchley Newport Pagnell Blunham Northampton & surrounding Broom Northill Cambridge & surrounding Old Warden Clifton Pegsdon Cockayne Hatley Pirton Codicote Potton Dunton Ridgmont East Hatley Royston Eversholt Sandy Everton Southill Eyeworth St. Ippolyts Fairfield Park Stony Stratford Gamlingay Stotfold Great Barford Sutton Great Gransden Tempsford Henlow Therfield Heydon Upper Cadecote Hinxworth Weston Hitchin Whitwell Holwell Woburn Husborne Crawley Wrestlingworth Ickleford Post-Christmas Delivery Dates Wednesday 30 December Bedford Olney Biddenham Oakley Bromham Pavenham Clapham Roxton Colmworth Ravensden Cople Stagsden Cotton End Stevington Cranfield Shortstown Elstow Sharnbrook Great Denham Stewartby Houghton Conquest Turvey Kempston Thurleigh Lavendon Upper Shelton Milton Ernest Wilstead Marston Moretaine Wixams Moggerhanger Wootton Post-Christmas Delivery Dates Thursday 31 December Ampthill Haynes Ashwell Huntingdon & surrounding Baldock Ireland Bennington Letchworth Bishops Stortford & surrounding Little Paxton Buckden Meppershall Buntingford Moulden Bygrave Offord Darcy Cambourne Saffron Walden & surrounding Campton Shefford Chicksands Shillington Clophill Shillington Cottered Silsoe Datchworth St Albans Digswell St. Neots Eaton Ford Stevenage Eaton Socon Walkern Eynesbury Welwyn Flitwick Western Gravely Wheathampstead Gravenhurst Woolmer Green Hatfield Wyboston Post-Christmas Delivery Dates Saturday 2 January 2021 Aylesbury & surrounding Ware Barton le Clay Watton Stone Cheddington Whipsnade Coddington Dunstable Harlington Harpenden Hertford Houghton Regis Leighton Buzzard Lilley Luton Markyate Offley Sharpenhoe Streatley Toddington .
    [Show full text]
  • Family and Estate Papers
    Family and estate papers Reference AL Family ALEXANDER of Pavenham Bury Archive type Deeds to land Places included Bedfordshire: Ampthill; Felmersham; Kempston; Oakley; Pavenham; Stevington; Riseley; Wilstead Berkshire: Bourton Essex: Woodford Middlesex: Finsbury Wiltshire: Bishopstone Reference AN Family ALINGTON of Little Barford Archive type: Deeds to land Places included: Bedfordshire: Arlesey; Eaton Socon; Great Barford; Henlow; Little Barford; Renhold; Stotfold Essex: West Ham Hertfordshire: Ashwell; Baldock; Bygrave; Clothall; Hitchin; Letchworth; Norton; Sandon; Wallington; Weston Huntingdonshire: Abbotsley Kent: Bromley; Wrotham Middlesex: Holborn; Westminster Northamptonshire: Burton Latimer; Finedon; Twywell Reference S/AM Family ASHBURNHAM of Ampthill Archive type Deeds to land; estate administration Places included Bedfordshire: Ampthill; Bedford; Bolnhurst; Brogborough; Clapham; Goldington; Higham Gobion; Lidlington; Marston Moretaine; Millbrook; Oakley; Ridgmont; Steppingley; Streatley; Thurleigh Reference BD Family BARNARD of Bedford and Cople Archive type Barnard's Bank; family papers; executors/trustees papers; deeds to land Places included Bedfordshire: Bedford; Roxton; Wilden Reference B Family BRANDRETH of Houghton Regis Archive type Genealogical; correspondence re Whitehead's School, Houghton Regis; estate papers; deeds to land Places included Bedfordshire: Ampthill; Caddington; Chalgrave; Houghton Regis; Stanbridge Reference BW Family BROWNLOW of Ashridge [Hertfordshire] Archive type Estate papers; deeds to land
    [Show full text]