St Faith, Cotswold Water Park
#37 among attractions in Cotswold Water Park
Facts and practical information
St Faith, Farmcote is a chapel of ease in Farmcote, Gloucestershire, 2 miles west-north-west of Temple Guiting. It has been designated by English Heritage as a Grade I listed building. ()
Cotswold Water Park United Kingdom
St Faith – popular in the area (distance from the attraction)
Nearby attractions include: Sudeley Castle, Prescott Speed Hill Climb, Snowshill Manor, Stanway House.
- 2 miWFortress with artefacts and famous gardens
Sudeley Castle, Winchcombe
52 min walk • Nestled in the heart of the Cotswolds, Sudeley Castle emerges as a quintessential example of England's rich historical tapestry. This enchanting castle, located in the picturesque town of Winchcombe, offers visitors a unique glimpse into the country's royal past.
- 4.9 miWSport venue, Sport, Sport complex
Prescott Speed Hill Climb, Cheltenham
125 min walk • Prescott Speed Hill Climb is a hillclimb in Gloucestershire, England. The course used for most events is 1,128 yards in length, and the hill record is held by Wallace Menzies who took the outright hill record in a Gould GR59M single seater with a time of 34.65 seconds on Sunday 5 September 2021.
- 3.8 miNEHistorical place, Museum, Garden
Snowshill Manor, Broadway
97 min walk • Snowshill Manor is a National Trust property located in the village of Snowshill, Gloucestershire, United Kingdom. It is a sixteenth-century country house, best known for its twentieth-century owner, Charles Paget Wade, an eccentric who amassed an enormous collection of objects that interested him.
- 2.2 miNGarden, Museum, Fountain
Stanway House, Broadway
57 min walk • Stanway House is a Jacobean manor house, located near the village of Stanway in Gloucestershire, England. The manor of Stanway was owned by Tewkesbury Abbey for 800 years then for 500 years by the Tracy family and their descendants, the Earls of Wemyss and March.
- 1 miNWRuins, Monuments and statues, History museum
Hailes Abbey, Broadway
26 min walk • Hailes Abbey is a former Cistercian abbey, in the small village of Hailes, two miles northeast of Winchcombe, Gloucestershire, England. It was founded in 1246 as a daughter establishment of Beaulieu Abbey. The abbey was dissolved by Henry VIII in 1539. Little remains of the abbey. It is a Grade I listed building and a scheduled monument.
- 3.3 miSWHistorical place, Archaeological site
Belas Knap, Winchcombe
84 min walk • Belas Knap is a neolithic, chambered long barrow situated on Cleeve Hill, near Cheltenham and Winchcombe, in Gloucestershire, England. It is a scheduled ancient monument in the care of English Heritage but managed by Gloucestershire County Council. "Belas" is possibly derived...
- 3.1 miNWChurch
St Andrew's Church, Cotswold Water Park
79 min walk • St Andrew's Church, Toddington is a Grade I Listed Building in the town of Toddington, Gloucestershire, England. The present church is the third to occupy the site.
- 3.4 miSEChurch, Gothic architecture, Romanesque architecture
St Michael's and All Angels Church, Cotswold Water Park
87 min walk • St Michael's and All Angels Church is in the village of Guiting Power, Gloucestershire, England. It is an active Anglican parish church in the deanery of Stow, the archdeaconry of Cheltenham and the diocese of Gloucester.
- 4.6 miW
- 2.5 miWMonastery
Winchcombe Railway Museum, Winchcombe
63 min walk • Winchcombe Abbey is a now-vanished Benedictine abbey in Winchcombe, Gloucestershire; this abbey was once in the heart of Mercia, an Anglo Saxon kingdom at the time of the Heptarchy in England.
- 5.3 miNWChurch, Architecture, Historical place
St Mary's Church
136 min walk • St Mary's Church, is a historic Anglican church at Little Washbourne in the civil parish of Dumbleton, Gloucestershire, England under the care of the Churches Conservation Trust.