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The Cotswold Lakes Trust (formerly the Cotswold Water Park Trust) is a registered charity. [9] It owns, leases or manages a number of sites within the area, and all are managed for a combination of conservation, public access, education and amenity. [ 10 ]
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The estate is attached to the Church of the Holy Rood and lies on Ampney Brook within the area known as the Cotswold Water Park. The house was built in the late 16th century by John Pleydell. Additions and extensions to the house were carried out in the 18th and 19th centuries. [1]
Founded in 1974, the hotel group had six hotels, the last of which, the Cotswold Water Park Hotel, near Cirencester, opened in 2007. [2] Following the company's purchase by Starwood Capital in January 2014, Four Pillars has been added to other UK acquisitions Principal Hayley Group and De Vere Group.
Row houses of Cotswold stone in Broadway, Worcestershire. The quaint buildings of the village attract many tourists. A 2017 report on employment within the Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty stated that the main sources of income were real estate, renting and business activities, manufacturing, and wholesale & retail trade repairs.
Cotswold Outdoor, Southside Wandsworth, London. Outdoor and Cycle Concepts Ltd, [1] trading as Cotswold Outdoor, is an outdoor recreation retailer in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland. It is a trading brand of Outdoor and Cycle Concepts Limited, who also own the Snow and Rock, Cycle Surgery and Runners Need chains of shops. [2]
The painting Water Willow with Kelmscott Manor in the background The Manor in News from Nowhere. Kelmscott Manor is a limestone manor house in the Cotswolds village of Kelmscott, in West Oxfordshire, southern England. It dates from around 1570, with a late 17th-century wing, and is listed Grade I on the National Heritage List for England.
Lechlade (/ ˈ l ɛ tʃ l eɪ d /) is a town at the edge of the Cotswolds in Gloucestershire, England, 55 miles (89 km) south of Birmingham and 68 miles (109 km) west of London.It is the highest point at which the River Thames is navigable, although there is a right of navigation that continues south-west into Cricklade, in the neighbouring county of Wiltshire.