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The Cotswold District area gained over £373 million from visitor spending on accommodation, £157 million on local attractions and entertainments, and about £100m on travel in 2016. [35] In the larger Cotswolds Tourism area, including Stroud, Cheltenham, Gloucester and Tewkesbury, [ 33 ] tourism generated about £1 billion in 2016, providing ...
Locator map of the Cotswolds range of hills in central and western England. Located in Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire, and Worcestershire. An Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty in England .
Map of Gloucestershire, England - UK. With Cotswold District highlighted. Equirectangular map projection on WGS 84 datum, with N/S stretched 160%: Date: 27 February 2011: Source: Ordnance Survey OpenData. Coastline and administrative boundary data from Boundary-Line product. Lake data from Meridian 2 product.
The Cotswolds’ network of freshwater lakes is one of the National Landscapes’ best-kept secrets, with 180 bodies of water perfect for swimming, water sports and wildlife watching – there’s ...
Broadway, Worcestershire. As it closely follows the scarp of the Cotswold Edge, the Cotswold Way usually affords views, mainly to the north and west—starting in the south with the Severn Estuary and Severn bridges, the meanders of the River Severn above Sharpness, the Forest of Dean, the Welsh hills of Monmouthshire and the Black Mountains on the Welsh border to the west.
Like the Cotswolds, it’s speckled with cozy cottage houses, quaint bridges over streams, and the aforementioned Sarre Windmill, an iconic local spot open to visitors year-round — though the ...
A golden-hued manor house set in 220 rolling acres, Calcot is great for families and for exploring the best of the Cotswolds, with Highgrove, Tetbury and Westonbirt Arboretum on the doorstep if ...
The Five Valleys [1] [2] are a group of valleys in Gloucestershire, England, which converge on the town of Stroud at the western edge of the CotswoldsThe Five Valleys are notable both for the landscape, which attracts visitors, and their role in industrial development of Britain starting with the wool trade in the 11th century, [3] and developing through cloth manufacturing in the 18th century.