East Oxford and Headington
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For Sale Supermarket Unit/Redevelopment Opportunity 14,752 Sq Ft (1,370 Sq M) 152 London Road, Headington, Oxfordshire OX3 9ED
For Sale Supermarket Unit/Redevelopment Opportunity 14,752 sq ft (1,370 sq m) 152 London Road, Headington, Oxfordshire OX3 9ED Busy A road location in the Oxford suburb of Headington Established commercial location close to Oxford Brookes University Approximately 0.6 acre site area Alternative use potential, including student residential, subject to planning. jll.co.uk/property 152 London Road, Headington, Oxford OX3 9ED Location Planning The property is situated in the busy suburb of Headington, It is assumed that the unit benefits from A1 use within the approx. 2.5 miles east of Oxford city centre. The property lies Town & Country Planning (Use Classes) Order 1987 (as within an established commercial location along London Road, amended). with nearby occupiers including Waitrose, Boots, Café Nero, Accommodation Iceland and Sainsbury’s Local. The suburb is home to Oxford We have not physically measured the property but have Brookes University, which boasts approx. 18,000 students and been provided with floor areas by the Co-op. approx. 3,000 staff members, as well as the John Radcliffe Sq m Sq ft Hospital. Total Sales Area 919.1 9,890 Back of House 451.5 4,862 Description First Floor Ancillary Unknown The unit is standalone purpose built foodstore arranged Total 1,370 .6 14,752 predominantly over ground floor, with a small first floor accommodating office and staff room. Site Area Approximately 0.6 acres (0.24 ha). There is car parking to the front and side of the property, and a separate car park immediately over Stile Road. There are c. -
New Marston Primary School Newsletter 27.11.20 Through a Rich
New Marston Primary School Newsletter 27.11.20 Through a rich, challenging and ambitious curriculum, we prepare our children to contribute actively and positively to their wider world. We help them to aim higher, reach further and shine brighter. Learning in school School lunches Key Stage 1 have started practising their Christmas play. It will look a little Please note the vegetarian sausage roll will change to a cheese pinwheel different this year, but the staff are very excited and channelling their on Monday of week 2. creative skills! It’s lovely to see such confidence and enthusiasm in the children. Safeguarding message Transition feedback Sadly there is another video circulating on social media (TikTok) which has Parents in our current Reception, Year One and Year Three classes have some very disturbing images. The video is named ‘Megan is missing’ and is been sent a short survey to complete regarding their child's transition from based on a film which is banned in many countries. Please be cautious if their previous year group to their current one. This will help us to evaluate your child is using the internet. May we remind you that TikTok is not and develop our transition procedures and make them even better. I would suitable for children aged under 13 and most social media sites have an be very grateful if you could complete the survey by 11.12.20 age limit which is 13 or above. Shoebox appeal This year we are running a shoebox appeal for a local charity. ‘Children Christmas cards Heard and Seen’ is an Oxford based charity which support children with a We are able to have Christmas cards brought parent in prison. -
AN OXFORDSHIRE CHILDHOOD Gillian Mackie 1.IFFLEY. Our
1 AN OXFORDSHIRE CHILDHOOD Gillian Mackie 1.IFFLEY. Our grandparents lived on Church Way, the loop of road right in front of the old Norman church of Iffley. Their house, which they called Avenham, was subsequently re-named Rick House, because it was built on the site of the cottages in the rickyard of an old farm. This may well have been the White family farm, as the parents of our grandmother Lily White lived in the adjacent house in their old age, and quite likely before this as well. This house is known to have been a farm-house. I was told as a child that the White family had "always" farmed in Iffley. I have always believed that Grandpa designed Avenham, which is an Italianate brick villa, and that he was an architect or landscape designer. Pat though says he worked for the Thames Conservancy & it was his father, in Lancashire, who followed this profession, and the name Avenham was taken from a park he had designed in Lancashire. It appears that Grandpa, George Edward Rowbotham, who was at school at St.Peter's, York, had done a year of studies in architecture before he came south in the 1890's and never went back. His drawing of Avenham on the right dates from about 1912 and is from Aunty Alice’s autograph book, which was discovered by Ken Hunnisett in a second-hand shop! Ken says the house still exists as No 101 Church Way. Grandpa cut his ties with his family in Preston, or rather they disowned him. -
Headington Hill Conservation Area Appraisal
Headington Hill Conservation Area Appraisal Consultation Draft June 2012 “You may approach Oxford in summer by road, or rail, or river. Most wise and most fortunate perhaps is he who can obtain his first view of Oxford from Headington Hill … Arriving then at the top of Headington Hill, let the traveller then turn aside, and, pausing awhile by “Joe Pullen’s” tree, gaze down at the beautiful city which lies at his feet” (Cecil Headlam, 1904) Contents Statement of Special Interest Part 1. The Conservation Area in Context 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Context 1.3 Historical Development 1.4 Introduction to Character Assessment Part 2. Headington Hill south of Cuckoo Lane 2.1 Spatial features 2.2 Views 2.3 Trees and green landscape 2.6 Architectural interest 2.7 Issues, vulnerabilities and opportunities for enhancement 2.8 Street Character Statements No. 1 Headington Hill Enclave Part 3. Headington Hill north of Cuckoo Lane 3.1 Spatial features 3.2 Views 3.3 Trees and green landscape 3.6 Architectural interest 3.7 Issues, vulnerabilities and opportunities for enhancement 3.8 Street Character Statements No. 2 Pullens Lane No. 3 Harberton Mead No. 4 Jack Straw’s Lane No. 5 Feilden Grove No. 6 Cuckoo Lane Sources Maps Map 1 Location Map Map 2 Predominant activity in the Conservation Area Map 3 Character Analysis Map – South of Cuckoo Lane Map 4 Character Analysis Map – North of Cuckoo Lane Map 5 Positive Buildings Map Map 6 Street Character Assessments Location Map Appendix A Headington Hill Policy Statement 1973 Appendix B Headington Hill Conservation Area Statement of Principles 1977 Appendix C Report of Public Consultation Part 1. -
Brookes Goes Walking : a Guide to the Route
Brookes Goes Walking : A Guide to the Route Starting from Brookes Students' Union: Follow the path to the bridge over the main road. This bridge was built in 1877 to link the two parts of the large Morrell estate on each side of the road below. The road was originally the Stokenchurch Turnpike constructed in 1775. Don't cross the bridge, instead walk down the road and turn right into Headington Park. The park was originally part of the ornamental garden belonging to the Hall where the Morrells lived. Turn left out of the park and cross the road with care. Take the path opposite down to the river. The large new stone building is the new Oxford University Centre for Islamic Studies. The building on the right by the River Cherwell was once the King’s Mill. It dates from the Middle Ages but stopped working in 1832. Turn right along the path. This area is called Mesopotamia, from the Greek for “between two rivers”. The original two rivers were the Euphrates and the Tigris so this Oxford version is on a slightly smaller scale! Along this stretch you will see many pollarded willows, trees which have been cut at about head height. The regrowth was used by local people for poles for building and fencing. Pollarding also prevents the trees from splitting when they get top heavy. On a map of 1887 a ferry was shown to operate here. The fields on both sides are often quite wet. Several fields you will see along the route contain rushes and sedges showing the marshy ground. -
Large Loop Directions Prayer Points
Large Directions Prayer Points Loop Start at the St Clement’s Centre. The Centre hosts many Head out of the onto cross street different groups like and turn left. Walk up to Morrell Toddlers, Pilates, and Scouts. Avenue. Pray for all those in our community who use this building. Choose to walk up Morrel Avenue Take the opportunity to pray or cross over the road and walk for and bless those people through South Parks. and their families who live here. Enter South Parks just passed the Pause halfway along the path kids park if you have walked up and look out toward Oxford Morrel Avenue and follow the track City. across to Cheney Lane. Pray for Oxford city, for the If you have waked though the parks businesses and community. you will find the path at the top of the park. Exit the park on to Cheney lane and Pause here at on Cheney turn left. Lane, opposite you slightly to Walk down the road and take the the right you will be able to first right into Cheney Village. see Cheney School. Pray for all the students especially those whose studies and exams have been affected by the pandemic. Pray also for the teachers. Walk through Cheney Village past As you walk through Cheney the Oxford Brookes University Village pray for the two Centre for sport and cross the university’s here in Oxford. bridge over Headington Road. For all the students whose Walk through the gate and follow studies have been affected. the path around to the left and walk Pray for the mental health of down the steps. -
Seed Bank Plants Presentation
Oxfordshire Recorders and Conservation Day, Saturday, 28 February 2015 Oxford University Museum of Natural History, Oxford OX1 3PW _______________________________________________________________________ Seed Bank Plants - presentation by Dr Judith A Webb All photos copyright J A Webb Introduction As long as I have been a botanist, I have been fascinated by seeds and growing plants from seeds. The theme of this conference is ‘Recording the Invisible’ and my imagination was first caught by the account of the resurrection of the rare plant Starfruit Damasonium alisma - apparently ‘back from the dead’. This had disappeared (been lost) in the flora of ponds that had become silted up or choked with emergent vegetation of sedge and bulrush, losing the shallow open water it needed. ‘Cleaning-out’ such a pond – removing most of the choking vegetation and silt to return it to an earlier successional stage – activates long-dormant (invisible) Starfruit seed held in the seed bank in the pond sediment (as long as some of the original sediment with dormant seed has been left or actively returned to the rejuvenated pond). It is important that we realise, as recorders, that a plant, though not seen as a flowering or vegetative organism, may not be extinct on a site. It may be still there but invisible in the form of viable but dormant seed in the soil or sediment. Such a seed bank might last for only a few years or for up to 100 years or longer depending on the species. What follows are some examples of what I have found out from my own observations and research on plants with seeds with long dormancy and those with short dormancy. -
(SAC/SSSI; Greenfield Fz3b; <0.25Ha; Under Construction
Table 1 Rejected Sites REJECT ST 1 Further work required with (SAC/SSSI; REJECT ST 2 (SA: landowner/ developer on Refinement of uses assuming satisfactory Ref no Site name Ward Greenfield FZ3b; Green Infrastructure Broad assessment against Preferred Options deliverability and evidence of suitability and deliverability <0.25ha; under Network; No access) suitability construction) UNDER CONSTRUCTION/BUILT Jericho and REJECTED - under 005 Avis site Osney construction Headington Hill REJECTED - under 041 Northway Centre and Northway construction REJECTED - under 056 South Park Depot, Cheney Lane St Clement's construction REJECTED - under 060 Travis Perkins, Chapel Street St Clement's construction REJECTED - under 085 Hooper House St Clement's construction Keble College, former Acland Hosp, 46 Woodstock REJECTED - under 091 North Rd, 25 Banbury Rd construction REJECTED - under 093 333 Banbury Road Summertown construction REJECTED - under 094 376 Banbury Road Summertown construction REJECTED - under 352 Balfour Road Blackbird Leys construction REJECTED - under 441 Fairfield Residential Care Home St Margaret's construction 015 Cowley Community Centre, Barns Road Cowley REJECTED - built 037 Marywood House, Leiden Rd Churchill REJECTED - built 197 Jericho and 418 Ruskin College, Walton Street REJECTED - built Osney SSSI/SAC 290 Shotover Country Park Lye Valley REJECTED - SSSI 524 Wolvercote Green Wolvercote REJECTED - SSSI Quarry and 528 Magdalen Quarry Nature Reserve REJECTED - SSSI Risinghurst 529 Rock Edge Nature Reserve Headington REJECTED -
Bayswater Fields
BAYSWATER FIELDS HEADINGTON CALA HO ME S Local area photography BAYSWATER FIELDS DESIRABLE OXFORDSHIRE LIVING RIGHT ON YOUR DOORSTEP Well designed and well connected, Bayswater Fields is the epitome of chic suburban living. Set within pleasant surroundings, this impressive collection of 32 luxury 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom homes combines easy access to the delights of Oxford together with frequent trains to London and Birmingham. The amenities of thriving Headington including a library, variety of shops, cafés and restaurants are just a mile away. Take this opportunity to relax into the lifestyle you want, in the location you’ve been seeking, where light and spacious interiors have been finished to CALA’s unique quality specification, all designed to offer contemporary, low maintenance living, with everyday amenities close by. Local area photography Photography from a previous CALA development Photography from a previous CALA development HEADINGTON THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS Headington sits to the east of Oxford city centre on Headington Hill. It has grown to become a large and desirable residential suburb, with John Radcliffe Hospital and Oxford Brookes University based there. Headington’s host of shops, cafés and restaurants are situated approximately a mile from Bayswater Fields, providing a convenient alternative to Oxford. However for more extensive choice and designer names, the city centre offers a complete shopping experience. Oxford’s cultural epicentre is a magnet for students and visitors alike, with Oxford University’s official ceremonial hall – the exquisite Grade I listed Sheldonian Theatre – also offering panoramic views of the famous city skyline. For a diversity of films, the Ultimate Picture Palace is just a few miles away, as is Magdalen Bridge Boathouse, for the fine tradition of punting along the picturesque River Cherwell. -
4 Vegetation Dynamics on Port Meadow 4.1 History of Port Meadow
4 Vegetation dynamics on Port Meadow 4.1 History of Port Meadow Port Meadow (132 ha) and Wolvercote Common (39 ha) (the Meadow) are adjacent commons lying on the River Thames flood-plain within Oxford City boundary (Map 2.5). They have been grazed since at least the Bronze Age and have never been ploughed. Shiplake Ditch forms the boundary between Port Meadow and Wolvercote Common. The common land and Hook Meadow form part of a larger Site of Special Scientific Interest first notified in 1952 and re-notified under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. The Nature Conservancy Council’s citation (1983) states that the history of ecological interest in the Meadow was taken into account so the SSSI should be extended to the whole of Port Meadow with Wolvercote Common, with the exception of the Wolvercote allotment gardens. The Meadow is also important as a gene bank of species, particularly well adapted to heavy grazing, which have already been fundamental in the development of agricultural leys (McDonald forthcoming). In 2004, Port Meadow was confirmed as a Special Area of Conservation under European Union legislation because of the presence of Apium repens. The whole was registered as a Scheduled Ancient Monument in 1993 because there are the remains of six Bronze Age burials and three Iron Age settlement sites and field systems on the commons (Map 4.1). Both commons are owned or held in Trust by Oxford City Council and Oxfordshire County Council under Section 9 of the Commons Registration Act 1965. Under the same Act, the Freemen of Oxford and the Wolvercote Commoners registered grazing rights for 1,365 horses, 1,890 cattle, 6 donkeys, 48 ducks and 1,192 geese. -
A Tale of Two Counties
A Tale of Two Counties Growing older in Oxfordshire Based on the research report Growing Older in Oxfordshire: review of evidence, by Margaret Melling, MM Consulting Limited, with acknowledgements to: Oxfordshire County Council Social and Community Services Oxfordshire Health and Wellbeing Partnership Oxfordshire Primary Care Trust Oxfordshire Data Observatory South Oxfordshire District Council Oxfordshire Rural Community Council Age UK Oxfordshire wishes to express its gratitude to Margaret Melling ([email protected]) for her care and scholarship in providing the analysis underpinning this report. Age UK Oxfordshire also thanks the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation for its generous support to this research and to the costs of the report. Edited by Gill Rowley ([email protected]) Designed by Harry Ward ([email protected]) All photos copyright Age UK Oxfordshire unless otherwise indicated Copyright © Age UK Oxfordshire 2010 Age UK Oxfordshire St Edmund House (registered office) 39 West St Helen Street Abingdon Oxon OX14 5BW Age Concern Oxfordshire is now Age UK Oxfordshire. The charity remains an independent local agency serving older people in Oxfordshire. It has also approved a brand partnership agreement between itself and Age UK, the new charity formed from the merger of Help the Aged and Age Concern England. Contents The demographic triumph, by Joan Bakewell 4 Ten steps to an age-friendly Oxfordshire 6 Having it all? The call to action 8 Research summary 12 1 Population and demographics 14 2 Living and housing 32 3 Employment and money 48 4 Health and well-being 66 5 Access and communities 90 Feedback from older people’s forums 105 Final words 113 Annex 1 Finding out more 114 Annex 2 Key indicators for older people in Oxfordshire 115 The demographic triumph I don’t believe that there is some different Above all, our hope of finding solutions to the and darker territory called ‘old age’. -
Map Referred to in the Oxfordshire (Electoral Changes) Order 2012 Sheet 5 of 7
SHEET 5, MAP 5 Electoral division boundaries in the west of Oxford Map referred to in the Oxfordshire (Electoral Changes) Order 2012 Sheet 5 of 7 A 4 4 W O O D S This map is based upon Ordnance Survey material with the permission of Ordnance Survey on behalf of T O CHERWELL DISTRICT WOODEATON CP C the Controller of Her Majesty's Stationery Office © Crown copyright. K R Unauthorised reproduction infringes Crown copyright and may lead to prosecution or civil proceedings. O (A) A D The Local Government Boundary Commission for England GD100049926 2012. YARNTON, GOSFORD AND WATER EATON WARD Scale : 1cm = 0.08000 km GOSFORD AND WATER EATON CP Grid Interval 1km YARNTON CP 4 Lake 4 4 3 A A l a Hotel n H a Peartree AN A I C RD L JO 4 L d Interchange 1 K r 6 i o n f 5 g x Lake s Lake O b r id g e SOUTH OXFORDSHIRE B r o Business o k Park Banbury Road North DISTRICT A 40 KIDLINGTON SOUTH ED E U Sports Ground N E (C) V (10) A E D I S WHEATLEY ED K N I W L Cemetery O (40) Wolvercote O Canal D S OAD Bridge T BORD R eam ut NOR O Lake HAR ill Str C TH B FOREST HILL AND HOLTON ote M 's ER C lverc e N A Wo k BY K u P N D A SS R ROA B D O U RO WARD A R A R PLA D D Y TEM CUTTESLOWE R O A D IVE DR ILE M VE K Lake FI in g Wolvercote Viaduct s b IELDS r HAREF id g e Allotment B D r A Gardens o O o R k S ELSFIELD CP S ELSFIELD A AY WAY -P NORTH W Y B Hotel N R E Cutteslowe T S E Primary Mill Stream W W UE O EN School Bridge O AV D D OR S F OAD WO T ND CARLTON R LSEY O LA ROAD River Cherwell WOLVERCOTE WARD C B K R Lake O A AD O D O x R fo NT r NA R d VE Recreation