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Cainscross, Calcot, Calcott's Green, Cam, Cambridge, Cashes Green, Chaceley, Chalford, Charlton Abbots, Charlton Kings, Chaxhill, Chedworth, Cheltenham, Chipping ...
A shopping outlet area which has been incorporated with the old warehouses in Gloucester Docks. On 5 December 2013, in a £60 million Quayside development, the nearby Cineworld moved from the Peel Centre across the road into the Quays and was renamed Cineworld Gloucester Quays. It is a fully digitalised 10-screen cinema complex with a 1,600 ...
The Gloucester and Sharpness Canal (also known as the Gloucester and Berkeley Canal) is a ship canal in the west of England, between Gloucester and Sharpness, completed in 1827. For much of its length the canal runs close to the tidal River Severn , but it cuts off a significant loop in the river, at a once-dangerous bend near Arlingham .
The River Cam is a small river in Gloucestershire, England. It flows for 12 miles (20 km) north-westwards from the Cotswold Edge , across the Vale of Berkeley , into the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal .
Gloucester Docks, 2013. Gloucester Docks is a historic area of the city of Gloucester. The docks are located at the northern junction of the River Severn with the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal. They are Britain's most inland port. [1] The docks include fifteen Victorian warehouses, that are now listed buildings. [2]
Gloucestershire Live is a local weekly newspaper based in Gloucester, England. Published every Thursday, it covers the areas of Bishops Cleeve, Cheltenham, Moreton-in-Marsh, Northleach, Stow-on-the-Wold and Tewkesbury. [2] The newspaper is headquartered at Gloucester Quays. [3]
Cam Bulldogs FC is Cam's football team and plays in the Gloucestershire Northern Senior League Division One. The cricket team is called Cam Cricket Club. Both play at Cam Sports Club, Everlands, which was established In 1923 by the owner of Cam Mills and now run and managed by Cam Sports Club, a registered charity.
The Gloucester Waterways Museum is part of Llanthony Warehouse, Gloucester, built in 1873. Designed by Capel N Tripp, for local corn merchants, Wait, James & Co. [3] It is a six storey red brick building, with a slate roof and stone lintels and sills. [4] The warehouse would have been used for storing timber, grain and alcohol. [5]