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词条 Yate
释义

  1. Schools

     Secondary schools  Primary schools  Special school 

  2. Location

  3. Administration

      National   County  Local 

  4. History

     Yate railway yard 

  5. Transport

     Railway  Buses 

  6. Design

  7. Twin town

  8. Industry

  9. Shopping

  10. Amenities

  11. Plans

  12. Local sport

     Athletics  Cricket  Football  Hockey  Rugby  Martial arts 

  13. Estates in Yate

     Abbotswood  North Yate  Brimsham Park  The Ridge  Ladden 

  14. Notable residents

  15. Literary references to Yate

  16. Location grid

  17. References

  18. External links

{{Other uses|Yate (disambiguation)}}{{Use British English|date=December 2011}}{{Refimprove|date=June 2009}}{{infobox UK place
|country = England
|official_name= Yate
|coordinates = {{coord|51.5402|-2.410989|display=inline,title}}
|civil_parish= Yate
|population = 27,603
|unitary_england= South Gloucestershire
|lieutenancy_england= Gloucestershire
|region= South West England
|constituency_westminster= Thornbury and Yate
|post_town= BRISTOL
|postcode_district = BS37
|postcode_area= BS
|dial_code= 01454
|os_grid_reference= ST7182
|static_image_name = Yate.church.view.arp.jpg
|static_image_caption = Yate from the tower of St Mary's Church
}}

Yate is a commuter town and civil parish in South Gloucestershire, England, at the southwest extremity of the Cotswold Hills, 12 miles (19.3 km) northeast of Bristol city centre and 98 miles (160 km) due west of London. Yate developed from a village into a sizable town from the 1960s onwards partly as an over-spill or commuter town for the city of Bristol. Although not a new town in the official sense, Yate took on many of the characteristics of one.

At the 2011 census the population was 21,603. The smaller town of Chipping Sodbury (population 5,045) is contiguous with Yate to the east. In addition, a large southern section of the built-up area spills over into the parish of Dodington (population 8,206), and so the total population of Yate's urban area is now approaching 35,000.

The town is the birthplace of Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling, who lived in Yate between 1965 and 1969.

Schools

Yate has two secondary schools, eight infant/junior schools and one special needs school.

Secondary schools

  • Brimsham Green School
  • Yate Academy (formerly King Edmunds School)

Primary schools

  • North Road School
  • Abbotswood School
  • Tyndale School
  • St Mary's School
  • St Paul's School
  • The Ridge
  • Wellesley School
  • Woodlands School

Special school

  • Culverhill School

Location

Yate is located in South Gloucestershire, which itself is in the South West of England. The town is to the north-east of Bristol city centre, which is about 11 miles away by road. A couple of miles to the south of Yate is the M4, which serves Yate from junctions 18 and 19. The South Wales Main Line, a branch of the Great Western Main Line runs along the south of Yate. This line does not have a station in Yate. The Cross Country route from Bristol to Birmingham and the north runs through the west of Yate. Yate railway station is situated on this line. Apart from Chipping Sodbury to the east, Yate is surrounded by countryside and is situated to the south-west of the Cotswolds. The A432 is the main road to serve Yate and runs through the centre of the town.

The Yate-Chipping Sodbury conurbation is near the centre of the South Gloucestershire district. It is situated between suburban Bristol to the southwest and the Cotswold escarpment to the northeast.

Administration

National

Yate is represented in the UK Parliament by the constituency of Thornbury and Yate.

County

Historically part of Gloucestershire until 1974 it then became part of the district of Northavon within the newly formed county of Avon. In 1996, Avon was abolished, and the area became part of the unitary authority of South Gloucestershire and rejoined the ceremonial county of Gloucestershire.

Local

Yate Town Council provides local services, which are displayed on their website.[1]

History

The first mention of Yate is the existence of a religious house in about AD 770; Yate is also mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086. The name is derived from the Old English word giete or gete, meaning ‘a gateway into a forest area’.[2]

During the Anglo-Saxon period and well into medieval times, most of this part of south Gloucestershire was covered with forest. Through the centuries the land was cleared for farming.

The town's parish church, St Mary's,[3]

dates from Norman times. It was altered during the 15th century and was extensively restored in 1970. St Mary's Primary School,[4] situated outside the churchyard walls, was built on the site of a former poorhouse.

It was the opening of the railway station in 1844, as part of Bristol and Gloucester Railway, that established Yate, with Station Road becoming the central thoroughfare. The cattle and produce markets were held around this road, and businesses were established there. Yate railway station was closed by the Beeching cuts in January 1965, but was reopened in May 1989; the Brunel-built engine shed is preserved nearby.

In the 1960s Yate was designated as a development area and the building boom began. The creation of a new town included a large retail shopping area, sports and leisure development together with public buildings.

When a secondary school was built in the late 1970s, it was supposed to be called Brinsham Green School, after Brinsham Lane at nearby Yate Rocks. Owing to a spelling error, however, it was in fact called Brimsham Green School.

The town further expanded in the 1990s and 2000s with the construction of housing at North Yate. This housing estate continued to use the corrupted name of Brimsham. To locals the area is known as Brimsham Park.

Yate railway yard

During the Second World War, a railway transfer yard was constructed for the United States Army, probably as part of Operation Bolero to assist the buildup of troops and stores before D-Day. Two large storage sheds survived on the site until 2008.

At the end of the Second World War, the site was taken over by the Royal Navy and became known as the Sea Transport Stores Depot. It was occupied by the Highways Agency until the sheds were demolished for development.
Oxford Archaeology[5] has been commissioned to undertake an investigation as to the military significance of this site. The opinion of Bristol Industrial Archaeological Society has also been sought.[6]

Transport

Railway

{{Main article|Yate railway station}}

Yate railway station serves the town. The railway station is located on the main Bristol to Birmingham line between Bristol Parkway and Cam & Dursley, and is operated by Great Western Railway.

Buses

Bus services within the Yate area are mainly provided by First West of England. Other operators who provide bus services to/from Yate include Andybus, Severnside Transport and South Gloucestershire Bus & Coach.

Regular bus services link Yate with Bristol city centre. There are also buses from Yate running to Bath, Cribbs Causeway, Malmesbury, Tetbury and Westonbirt Arboretum. Additionally, buses link Yate to a number of other towns/villages within South Gloucestershire including Badminton, Charfield, Chipping Sodbury, Downend, Emersons Green, Filton, Fishponds, Frenchay, Iron Acton, Kingswood, Pucklechurch, Mangotsfield, Old Sodbury, Staple Hill, Thornbury, Tormarton, Westerleigh, Wick, Winterbourne and Wotton-under-Edge.

Buses in Yate pick up and set down at Yate Bus Station which is at Yate Shopping Centre. A number of bus services also pass Yate railway station.

Design

Major growth in Yate started in the early 1920s with the construction of the Moorlands Road estates behind Station Road, close to the Parnall aeroplane factory. In the 1950s the Ridge housing estate was developed. The area between these estates was still being mined for celestine and therefore could not be built on until the mineral had been extracted.

In the 1960s the area around Stanshawes was exhausted of celestine and the housing boom started with the major construction taking place in the south. Much of this development was planned using the Radburn model, a design that created a vehicle-free environment by the use of green spaces and linking paths at the front of the houses. This model was used until the late 1980s and early 1990s, when the planners reverted to traditional street design methods for the development of the remainder of North Yate, Brinsham Park and the Newmans factory site.

Twin town

Yate is twinned with Bad Salzdetfurth in Germany, and Genieri in Gambia.{{citation needed|date=February 2012}}

Industry

Before the Second World War, Yate had an aircraft manufacturing industry (Parnall) with a grass aerodrome.[7] During the Second World War, Parnall specialised in making gun turrets. A number of people were killed in raids by the Luftwaffe on the factory in February and March 1941.[8]

Following the war, the Parnall factory turned to the manufacture of domestic goods and was famous for its washing machines. In 1958 Parnall merged with Radiation Ltd to become known as Jackson, producing the Jackson range of cookers. Through mergers and acquisitions, Jacksons is now part of Indesit and the Jackson name is no longer used.

Newman's of Bristol had a large factory on Station Road, from 1932 until the 1980s, in its heyday in the 1960s, employing over 1,500 people.

Yate has had three natural products associated with it: limestone to the east, celestine or spar near the centre of the town and coal to the west.

The need for limestone increased with the growth of roads, while the demand for coal grew with the diminishing supply of timber. Celestine, the major strontium mineral, was first dug in the late 1880s and was initially used for the refining of sugar beet. At one time Yate’s celestine accounted for 95 per cent of the world's production.[9] It colours flames red, and so was important for pyrotechnics such as fireworks, military and signal flares and tracer bullets. The last commercial excavation of celestine from the Yate area was for use during the Vietnam War. The mining company, Bristol Mineral and Land Co, closed in 1994.

Shopping

Construction of a pedestrianised shopping centre of around a hundred shops began in the early-to-mid-1960s.[10] The shopping centre was opened by Patricia Phoenix, (who played Elsie Tanner in ITV's Coronation Street), Mary Rand (athlete) and Ted Ray (comedian). As with the most British net towns, modern art was included in the design: in the case of Yate, this was in the form of the Four Seasons sculpture, and a graceful and dramatic spire-shaped sculpture, which could be seen for miles, mounted high above the centre on the roof of one of the shops. This sculpture existed until the early 1990s when it was removed during the revamping of the centre, which included the erection of glass roofs over the walkways. An extension to East Walk was constructed at the start of the 1980s, and this included the construction of a new Tesco store, with the old store in South Walk turned into a Tesco Home and Wear store. An extension to West Walk was constructed in the early 1990s.

Yate shopping centre housed a single screen cinema until the early 1980s. It was closed and replaced with Spirals nightclub. The club closed in the 2000s and was replaced with Rileys pool club and then by Waves, another club. Waves closed in 2012. A youth centre called Armadillo opened in 2011.

Shops in the centre include Tesco, Boots chemist, Halfords Metro, Iceland (supermarket), Argos, Superdrug and the Entertainer. Eating places in the centre include McDonald's, Boswells and Wetherspoons.

During the 1980s and into the mid-1990s, the shopping centre hosted Yate’s annual festival. On opening day a celebrity launched the festival by releasing balloons and stayed to sign autographs. Celebrities have included Carole Lee Scott, in character as Grotbags (from Rod Hull and Emu's enemy), Timmy Mallett, Keith Chegwin, Ross Kemp (EastEnders' Grant Mitchell), Ken Morley (Coronation Street's Reg Holdsworth), David Neilson (Coronation Street's Roy Cropper), Beverley Callard (Coronation Street's Liz McDonald), Bob Carolgees and Spit the Dog, and the Milky Bar Kid. The festival also brought along a number of news presenters from HTV West including Bruce Hockin, Richard Wyatt and Peter Rowell.

On 19 November 2009, a large crowd packed into the shopping centre to see Peter Andre switch on the town's Christmas lights and sing his single "Unconditional".

On 15 November 2012, Steps plus a finalist (still to be announced) from the 2012 series of the X Factor were due to switch on the town centre's Christmas lights.

In December 2006, the owners of the shopping centre (Dominion Corporate Trustees) announced plans to enlarge and modernise it. In Phase 1 one of the main changes has been the replacement of the existing small Tesco with a large Tesco Extra. To replace lost shopping centre parking following the enlargement, the store is on stilts, with parking beneath. It opened on 24 October 2011.

Located near the shopping centre are Lidl, Morrisons and B&Q. There are two Tesco Express stores in Yate: one on Station Road and one in Brimsham Park. The B&Q was built in the mid-to-late 1980s, along with two small housing estates, on the site of the Newman's electric motor factory which had been demolished in the mid-1980s. There is also a Screwfix branch located on one of the trading estates.

The shopping centre also has a Jobcentre Plus, Citizens Advice Bureau, library, leisure centre, over-50s café and a health centre.

In 2008, construction of a new health centre began on the site of the old one, costing around £12 million. The new West Gate Health Centre (formerly the West Walk Health Centre) was officially opened on 8 March 2010.

In August 2009, plans were agreed for Tesco to pull down their store and replace it with a more modern store, known as a Tesco Extra. The plans include four more shop units, moving the bus station and a revamped entrance to East Walk. The revamp of the town's bus station was officially opened in January 2010. A temporary Tesco store was opened on 28 February 2011 while the new Tesco Extra was under construction. The old Tesco closed its doors on 27 February 2011 and the Tesco Extra store opened on 24 October 2011.

It was revealed in September 2011 that Marks and Spencer have asked for planning permission for a new store in two of the four new units, on which building work will commence in October 2012. The other two units will be occupied by Costa Coffee and Sports Direct. This second phase of the centre's expansion plans is being built next to Superdrug, in East Walk (opposite the Tesco Extra store). The public toilets next to the Superdrug store will be demolished and re-built on West Walk.

J. D. Wetherspoons public house and restaurant opened in the summer of 2012, on the corner of South Walk/South Parade, occupying several units, including the former Motorworld store.

In September 2014, it was finally announced that Yate would get a new cinema. The cinema would be operated by Cineworld and would be part of a further expansion to the Yate Shopping Centre, which was also to include seven restaurants. The extension was built on and behind the current overflow carpark on Link Road, on the other side from the Tesco Extra store, and was called 'Yate Riverside'. Construction began in early 2015 and the cinema opened in spring 2016.

Amenities

The town has a skatepark at Peghill. Yate Common on Westerleigh Road is used for dog walking, nature watching, kite flying, circuses and fairs.

The common has a stretch of unused dual carriageway ({{Coord|51.532282|-2.433879}}), known as the "road to nowhere", which has been used for filming in TV programmes such as Casualty.[11] This was part a scheme to create a bypass from Rodford Way in South Yate to Nibley.{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}} The scheme was only partially completed in 1974, the year when Yate became a part of Avon. Completion of the road would have entailed building a bridge over the railway, but finance for this was never made available.

The town has several parks and areas of open space. The largest of these is Kingsgate Park, which has an adventure playground for children.

The town is served by a community radio station, GLOSS FM which broadcasts 365 days a year on its webcasts and twice a year on 87.7 MHz FM.

A Cineworld cinema opened in the new riverside shopping centre in April 2016.

The town benefits from a four appliance firestation, with a retained Crew 24 hours and the further tenders manned on a voluntary basis.

Next to the firestation is a 6 bay ambulance station with a further 3 ambulances and 2 response cars stabled outside.

Plans

Yate and Chipping Sodbury have been earmarked for 5,000 new homes to be built by 2026. While the location of the housing has yet to be decided, the expected areas are to the north of Yate, and towards Chipping Sodbury.

Local sport

Athletics

Yate and District Athletic Club[12] is a track-and-field club based at Yate Outdoor Sports Centre. YOSC is also home to Yate RFC [13]

Cricket

Chipping Sodbury Cricket Club[14] is Yate's nearest cricket club, providing cricket for men, women, boys and girls. They play their home matches on their two grounds at the Ridings playing fields in Chipping Sodbury.

Football

Yate Town F.C.[15] play in the Southern League South and West Division. There is also a ladies' football team, Yate Town Girls/Ladies FC,[16] that play in local leagues.

Yate is also home to Yate United Youth F.C., the largest local youth only football club, established in 1971. They play their home matches at Yate Outdoor Sports Complex, Sunnyside Playing Fields and Kelston Close playing fields.[17]

The largest local club is St. Nicholas F.C. Otherwise known as St. Nick's, this club has a total of 21 teams, including two ladies and one men's team. They play at The Ridings, Wickwar Road, Chipping Sodbury. The women's first team, St Nicholas L.F.C., play in South West Division One of the FA Women's Premier League, and play their home games at Yate Town's ground on Lodge Road.

Hockey

Yate Hockey Club runs teams from adult to junior.[18]

Rugby

Yate RFC [19] is a club founded by Stewart Stacey in 2016 which plays home fixtures at Yate Outdoor Sports Complex.

Martial arts

Bujinkan Kagami Dojo teaches traditional Ninjutsu and Samurai warrior arts at Yate Leisure Centre.[20]

Estates in Yate

Abbotswood

Abbotswood has a small shopping centre, privately owned blocks of flats, a youth club and a church.

North Yate

Construction began in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

Brimsham Park

Construction of the estate began in the early 1990s.

The Ridge

The Ridge is a large housing estate with two local schools, Broadway Infants School and the Ridge Junior School. There are shops in the centre of the estate including a convenience store and dentists.

Ladden

Construction of a new garden village is due to start at the northern side of Yate in Summer 2018. [21]

Notable residents

J.K. Rowling, author of the Harry Potter fantasy series, was born in 1965 at the Chipping Sodbury Maternity Hospital (later the Chipping Sodbury Memorial Day Centre), on Station Road, Yate. Until the age of four, she lived with her parents in Sundridge Park, Yate.[22][23][24] The Chipping Sodbury Memorial Day Centre was sold by the North Bristol NHS trust in 2012 and has now been converted to 9 luxury apartments.

Literary references to Yate

Yate was awarded the tongue-in-cheek honour of being the 45th worst place to live in the UK, according to the Idler Book of Crap Towns,[25] while Half Man Half Biscuit's song "The Referee's Alphabet" on their Cammell Laird Social Club album of 2002 informs the listener that "Y is for Yate, the kind of town that referees come from".

Location grid

{{Geographic Location
|title = Neighbouring town, villages and hamlets
|Northwest = Iron Acton
|North = Rangeworthy
|Northeast = Wickwar
|West = Coalpit Heath
|Centre = Yate
|East = Chipping Sodbury
|Southwest = Ram Hill
|South = Westerleigh
|Southeast = Codrington
}}

References

1. ^Yate Town Council official website
2. ^English Towns Website
3. ^St Mary, Yate Diocese of Bristol
4. ^St.Marys School, Yate official website
5. ^Oxford Archaeology Official Website
6. ^Bristol Industrial Archaeological Society (BIAS) official website
7. ^History of Parnall Aircraft.
8. ^The Bombing of Parnall's Aircraft Factory of Yate BBC WW2 People's War
9. ^Ian S. Bishop, Around Yate and the Sodburys (Nottingham: Adlard Print and Reprographics Ltd, 2010), 1.
10. ^Yate Shopping centre
11. ^South Gloucestershire council hires out many venues for filming / training purposes
12. ^Yate and District Athletic Club official website
13. ^Yate Rugby Club Official Website
14. ^Chipping Sodbury Cricket Club official website
15. ^Yate Town F.C official website of Yate F.C.
16. ^Yate Town Girls/Ladies FC
17. ^Official website of Yate United F.C.,
18. ^Yate Hockey Club official website
19. ^Yate Rugby Club Official Website
20. ^http://www.bujinkankagamidojo.co.uk www.bujinkankagamidojo.co.uk
21. ^[https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/business/thousands-new-homes-being-built-750048 Thousands of new homes being built in Yate will create 7,500 jobs]
22. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=GJgbW9c9mpwC&pg=PA11 Connie Ann Kirk, J.K. Rowling: A Biography, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2003, pp.11–12]
23. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=LEnHs53G0j0C&pg=PA110 C. D. Miller, Harry Potter Places: Snitch-Seeking in Southern England and Wales, Book 3, First Edition Design Pub., 2012, pp.110–113]
24. ^Lynne Hutchinson, Concerns raised about future of former Chipping Sodbury cottage hospital site, Gazette Series, 6 September 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2013
25. ^Idler book of Crap Towns, eds Sam Jordison and Dan Kieran (Box Tree 2003)

External links

{{Commons category|Yate, Gloucestershire|Yate}}
  • {{dmoz|/Regional/Europe/United_Kingdom/England/Gloucestershire/Yate/}}
{{South Gloucestershire}}{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2010}}{{Authority control}}

4 : Towns in Gloucestershire|South Gloucestershire District|Civil parishes in Gloucestershire|Radburn design housing estates

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