Biggleswade
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Biggleswade is a market town in Bedfordshire.Get in
By train
The station is in Station Road, close to the town centre, and linked to the Dells Lane area by a footbridge.
- There is a staffed ticket office with limited opening hours. There is also a 24-hour ticket machine next to the footbridge.
- All platforms are accessed via the footbridge with steps only - there is no level access to any platform.
- Biggleswade is on the East Coast Mainline, served by Great Northern services between London King's Cross and Peterborough.
- Important stops include: Hatfield, Welwyn Garden City, Stevenage, Hitchin, Sandy, St Neots & Huntingdon.
- The journey to King's Cross takes approximately 30 minutes on the peak-hour express trains, 40 on a fast train, 50 on a semi-fast.
- Standard service pattern (Mon-Sat) is one fast and one semi-fast train per hour.
- There is an ATM/cashpoint outside of the ticket office
- A small café is available to the right of the main station building (limited opening hours)
- Paid for car parking is available outside the station main building, and also in the former goods yard (adjacent to the concrete block distribution depot). Tickets are obtained from machines. There is also a smaller free car park further along the same access road in the former goods yard.
By bus
There is a small bus station on the Market Square.
- Regular services operated by Stagecoach :
- 73 Biggleswade - Sandy - Moggerhanger - Bedford (half-hourly)
- M4 Biggleswade - Ickwell - Cople - Cardington - Bedford (hourly)
- 171 Biggleswade - Henlow - Hitchin (hourly)
- E1 Biggleswade - Potton - Gamlingay (every 2 hours)
- E2 Biggleswade - Potton - Everton - Sandy (every 2 hours)
- E4 Biggleswade - Eyeworth - Wrestlingworth (hourly)
- E6 Biggleswade - Upper Caldicote - Old Warden (loop, every 2 hours)
- 200 Biggleswade - Shefford - Clophill - Maulden or Ampthill (every 2 hours)
By road
- Biggleswade is on the A1, about 10 miles after the end of the Southern Section of the A1(M). It is therefore well connected to London, the M25, Hertfordshire, Peterborough and the North. The A14 passes North of Biggleswade, linking the A1 to East Anglia and the East Midlands.
- Smaller roads link the town to Bedford and Cambridge.
By bike
- The A1 is not a very cycle-friendly road; other, smaller roads in the area are far more so.
- There are several bridle paths linking Biggleswade to surrounding towns, which are passable for mountain and hybrid bikes.
- The National Cycle Network Route 51 is due to be extended from Biggleswade to Sandy and Hitchin, using some of these bridle paths and minor roads.
- The old Sandy-Bedford railway line nearby is now a dedicated cycle route (National Cycle Network Route 51).
Get around
Biggleswade is a small town, and many places can be reached on foot. There are, however, some outlying trading estates and superstores.
By bus
- There are two hourly, daytime, local services, operated by Herberts Travel :
- 185 Town Centre to Holme Court Avenue.
- 187 Town Centre to Stratton Way.
By car
- The town centre can get congested, but there are large car parks at Asda (in Church Street), and in Rose Lane. Smaller car parks are located in St Andrew's Street, opposite the Library/Fire Station in Chestnut Avenue, and for Aldi customers, in Bonds Lane. There is also time-restricted parking on the Market Square (except Saturdays when the Market is in town) and in the area around Station Road and Back Street.
By bike
- There is a cycle route running North-South through the town, mostly off-road, and following the railway line.
- The town centre has plenty of bike racks.
See
- Biggleswade has an attractive market square in the centre of the town, which hosts a lively general market on Saturday,a monthly farmers market and occasional continental markets.
- The River Ivel runs along the West side of the town, and has a mix of industrial, residential and rural views, some attractive, some less so. You can gain access by the Mill, and up by Sainsbury's, at the Northern A1 roundabout.
- St Andrew's Church is an attractive building on Shortmead St, set in a pleasant churchyard.
- The Local History Society has applied 'Green Plaques' to many buildings in the Town Centre with a short description of historical interest. Of particular note is the plaque in Shortmead Street denoting where Dan Albone, the inventor of the world's first practical motorised agricultural tractor ('The Ivel'), lived and had his workshop.
Do
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phone: +44 1767 313190address: Saxon Drive, SG18 8SUA good leisure centre on the Saxon Estate, with a gym and pool (and an active swimming club).
Buy
- There are several shops (local and chains) in the town centre, as well as the Saturday and farmers' markets.
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address: Church Street, SG18Supermarket on the old brewery site, in the town centre.
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address: Bells Brook, SG18 0NAOut near the A1 Northern roundabout, with a petrol station.
- There is a trading estate on London Road, with a number of national chain shops, including Matalan, Halfords, Homebase, Laura Ashley (Home), Bensons, Argos Extra, Brantano, and Carpets for Less.
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address: Holme Mills, SG18 9JYJordans are based in Biggleswade, and have a pleasant factory shop at Holme Mills, adjacent to the River Ivel between Biggleswade and Broom (the 200 bus service passes the door).
Eat
Restaurants
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Raj Bengal
address: 61 Hitchin StreetDoes a great set dinner on Sunday -
The Viceroy
address: 51 Sun Street, SG18 0BYAnother Indian restaurant, slightly further out of town, on Sun Street.
Cafés
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address: 3-4 Market House, SG18 8AQA very popular local meeting place, in the middle of the Market Square. Provides free WiFi with heaters and blankets outside in the winter. Great in the summer with over 100 people chilling in the sunshine.
Takeaways
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Beego's Sandwich Bar
address: 32 High Street, SG18 0JLFor the best sandwiches and baked potatoes in town!
Pub-restaurants
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phone: +44 1767 627225address: Old Warden, SG18 9HQJust outside of Biggleswade in Old Warden, a wonderful pub-restaurant, serving home-cooked food. Named best dining pub in Bedfordshire in 2006.
Dan Albone
Drink
There are several pubs throughout the town, particularly around the High Street and Market Square. Biggleswade used to be a brewing town, with Greene King brewery based where the Asda supermarket now stands. This means that most of the pubs are Greene King with the exception of a few freehouses.
The bar at the Stratton House Hotel is nice but can get a bit busy at weekends and has an over+21 door policy. The Lounge in Church Street is more upmarket and has a large spirits, wine and champagne list. The New Inn on Market Square is frequented by those only just old enough to drink but has a great juke box and a nice landlady. Real ale aficionados head for The Rose or the Golden Pheasant. The Red Lion has live bands at the tail end of the week and is open until late.
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Lounge
address: Church Street, SG18 0JSSophisticated wine and tapas bar in a 300-year-old vaulted malting barn. Very strict door policy so you'll be in good company in the evening with a fine wine and champagne drinking crowd. Gets very busy for lunch and weekend evenings. Plays musicals every Monday evening.
Sleep
There's only a couple of hotels in the town itself: there are, however, more motel-style places out by the A1, and some country B&Bs in the area.
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address: London Road, SG18 8ED
Go next
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address: Shuttleworth (Old Warden) Aerodrome, Nr. Biggleswade, SG18 9EPAn eccentric assortment of an airfield with antique aircraft (including some used in the film 'Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying machines) and vintage transport, a Swiss Garden, a bird of prey centre and a play area. Just outside Biggleswade, in the delightful village of Old Warden.
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address: off Potton Road, SandyThis lodge is the HQ of the RSPB and has a wonderful reserve to visit, even if you're not especially into birds. Sandy is a few miles North of Biggleswade. You can walk, take the train or the bus.
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address: Park Road, Moggerhanger, Beds, MK44 3RWA Grade 1 listed Georgian Country House by Sir John Soane with gardens originally laid out by Humphrey Repton, now a Christian Conference Centre. Cafe and Bistro open to the public - guided tours of the house (formerly home of the Governor of the Bank of England)available
- Cambridge is 25 miles away.