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Routes
Road cycling routes
United Kingdom
England
West Midlands Region
Warwickshire
Stratford-On-Avon
Alcester

Alcester Town Centre – Great Alne Village loop from Alcester

Easy

25

riders

Alcester Town Centre – Great Alne Village loop from Alcester

01:11

28.4km

120m

Road cycling

Easy road ride. Great for any fitness level. Mostly well-paved surfaces and easy to ride. The starting point of the route is accessible with public transport.

Last updated: April 16, 2026

Waypoints

A

Start point

Bus stop

Get Directions

1

451 m

Alcester Firefighters Memorial Garden

Highlight • Structure

Alcester Fire-Fighters Memorial Garden, next to Alcester Fire Station, is a memorial tribute to the four fire fighters that lost their lives while fighting a fire in Atherstone-on-Stour in 2007. A wonderful garden to visit and reflect on this huge sacrifice by these brave men...i still remember the emergency services lined route from the burned out warehouse when they were removed from the site...very moving and respectful.

Tip by

2

918 m

St Nicholas Church, Alcester

Highlight • Religious Site

There has been a church in the heart of the Roman town of Alcester since records began. The oldest part of the church you see today is the tower, a surviving part of a 14th century building, with the rest a Georgian addition from about 1730. The church is set within a beautiful and calm churchyard. There is a sensory garden beside the north wall.

Tip by

3

970 m

No. 10 Coffee Shop

Highlight • Cafe

Lovely little independent coffee shop, excellent pit stop spot for coffee and cake!

Tip by

4

1.09 km

Alcester Town Centre

Highlight • Settlement

Historic Warwickshire town. Many places to stop for food and drink, or just a look around.

Tip by

5

5.93 km

Great Alne Village

Highlight • Other

6

9.59 km

Wootton Wawen Aqueduct

Highlight • Structure

Great stop for a snack with cakes, pastries, sandwiches and scones available with a cup of Italian coffee.

Open Tuesday-Friday: 10am-5pm.

Tip by

7

11.6 km

St John the Baptist Church, Aston Cantlow

Highlight • Religious Site

Church. Chancel, nave and tower late C13; north aisle and chapel, and upper stage of tower late C14; porch and restoration 1850 by William Butterfield. Chancel, nave and tower of coursed limestone and lias rubble; aisle and chapel of regular coursed lias; porch of rubble, limestone ashlar and timber. Nave and chancel have tile roofs, aisle and chapel have lead. Chancel, nave, north aisle and north chapel, west tower and south porch. Early English and Decorated. 3-bay chancel, 4-bay nave. Chancel has angle buttresses. East and north walls have moulded string courses. 3-light Decorated east window with renewed tracery; bottom section stone-panelled. Three 2-light south windows with differing cusped enriched Y-tracery. Arched doorway between second and third windows has 2 hollow chamfers and studded door with strap hinges. 2-light Early English north window with bar tracery. Hood moulds throughout. Coped gable with mid C19 foliated cross. Nave has arched south door and doorway of 1850. Porch has timber arch. South windows renewed. Two 3-light Decorated style windows with Reticulated tracery and straight heads. Single trefoiled lancet with hood mould. North aisle and north chapel in one. Buttresses and diagonal east buttress. East and north walls have moulded plinths. String course and coped parapet with string course. Double-leaf north door with chamfered arch and hood mould. Niche above has renewed ogee head and remains of medieval carving of the Nativity, with recumbent Virgin (VCH). 3-light Decorated east window with 5 radiating lobes, hood mould and head stops; said to come from a medieval chapel at Wilmcote (VCH). Two 2-light Decorated north windows with ogee lights and hood moulds; easternmost (chapel) window has head stops. Similar west window without hood mould. Hexagonal north-west stair turret, possibly for a beacon; lowered late C19. Slit window and round window with 3 mouchettes high up in north east re-entrant angle. Tower in 2 stages with chamfered plinth, irregular quoins and string course. Diagonal west buttresses with 2 offsets. Early English lower stage has west lancet and small lancet above. Higher up are north, south and west lancets. Upper stage has paired 2-light openings with ogee lights, quatrefoils and hood moulds. Crenellated parapet with string course and pinnacles.

Interior: Chancel has low-pitched elliptical arch-braced C15 or C16 roof with moulded purlins and central rib, and brattished wall plates. The easternmost bay is panelled, forming wagon roof painted and decorated with stars, and cutting across the top of th east window. Three C13 sedilia and piscina with hollow-moulded arches, hood mould and head stops. Early English style chancel arch of 1850 has clustered shafts with stiff leaf capitals. Low stone screen walls by Butterfield have coped top and pierced quatrefoils, and Gothic iron gates. Nave has scissor braced roof with collars, probably of 1850. West organ gallery 1850. Triple-chamfered tower arch on moulded corbels. Late C13 two-bay chapel and 4-bay nave arcades have simple arches of 2 chamfered orders, octagonal piers, and moulded capitals and bases. Nave has responds with moulded corbels, the easternmost C19. North aisle and chapel have very low-pitched roof with moulded tie beans. North-west door to stair turret, with sexfoil circular opening high above Fittings: Reredos with tracery panels (Buildings of England); dismantled at time of resurvey. 2 chairs in chancel made from C15 stalls. C15 hexagonal oak pulpit with foiled and crocketed ogee panels, moulded rails and buttresses with finials. C15 octagonal stone font in north aisle has quatrefoil to each face, and stem and buttresses with bearded heads. C17 font stem: wood column with gadrooned top. C15 bench, cut in two, in north aisle has moulded rails and poppy heads. Mid C19 pews and Gothic altar rails. Stained glass: C14 fragments in north aisle north-east window. Nave lancet has good glass of c.1852. Late C19 east and chapel east windows by Charles Kempe. Lead panel, nave west wall: dated 1757 with names of church wardens; removed from chapel roof 1969. The chapel was associated with the Guild dedicated to St. Mary.

Listed Grade I for considerable survival of medieval fabric with many medieval windows, unusual stair turret and medieval chancel roof, and as an example of the restoration by William Butterfield.

Tip by

8

19.6 km

Champs Café

Highlight • Other

B

28.4 km

End point

Bus stop

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Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

27.4 km

470 m

395 m

< 100 m

Surfaces

24.0 km

4.34 km

< 100 m

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Elevation

Elevation

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Weather

Powered by Foreca

Sunday 12 July

27°C

12°C

0 %

Additional weather tips

Max wind speed: 27.0 km/h

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