Welcome To AG Paving Contractors Buckland Common, HP23

AG Paving is Buckland Common, HP23 based paving contractor that serves Buckland Common and surrounding areas. We provide a vast array of paving and landscaping services at budget-friendly prices. We provide a complete service; assessment, style, supply, and installation. Whether you are looking for a total garden overhaul or an easy tidy up we make certain to have the perfect option to match both your taste and budget. We have a substantial series of patio area and paving choices for you to select from including; Indian sandstone, granite, limestone, cobblelock, gravel and concrete pieces simply among others. We specialise in the setup of natural stone paving, for both driveways and patio areas. Our quality and rates will not be beaten. Why not check out our gallery to see our large array of paving options and we make certain you’ll discover something to match your taste. We source our quality materials from just the very best and well renowned suppliers to guarantee that the paving we provide to you will stand the test of time. Quality products coupled with our experience in installation suggests that you can rest ensured you will have a beautiful driveway or patio for several years to come.

AG Paving Buckland Common, HP23 – Driveways, Patio and Garden Contractors

A lovely new driveway or patio area will make a substantial modification to your house. We offer a wide array in paving designs to match any styled home, be it of modern, traditional or contemporary style.

We also offer a vast array of colour and style options from which you can pick the most proper style of paving in Buckland Common for your house. We will use advice on design, design and all technical aspects of the driveway or outdoor patio setup.

We set up a vast array of domestic and industrial paving; from forecourts, driveways, paths and patio areas through to your garden location with flower beds, raised flower beds, turfing and slabbing.

Weed free-and-easy maintenance, paving will not only make your life easier but can likewise add worth to your home and boost its look. Picking the most appropriate paving system for your home is really essential as it represents a long-lasting financial investment in your property. All our work is brought out by our own extremely skilled paving contractor in Buckland Common, HP23.

Once you have picked the style and colour mix, you can then also choose from a variety of customized developed functions such as circles, diamonds and even having your initials embedded. This will ensure your paving is truly unique.

UK best rated paving contractors in Buckland Common, HP23

Our services include:

Driveways Buckland Common, HP23

We are specialists at Driveways Buckland Common. We can lay and construct budget friendly and bespoke driveways for our consumers. All our work is done to the highest of standards. We utilize only quality driveway products beginning with the setup of your base to the finished surface area of your driveway to make sure a long lasting driveway setup.

Paving Buckland Common, HP23

We pride ourselves on the quality of our Paving Buckland Common. We provide a paving service which consists of laying paving, changing old driveways and building patio areas with garden paving in Buckland Common, HP23.

NOTE: Please check out other services Block PavingDriveways & PatiosCommercial DrivewaysResin DrivewaysGravel DrivewaysLandscaping and benefit from our packages. Or just simply contact now AG Paving for a free on-site quote. Please also have a look at our amazing testimonialsabout us and gallery. Our blog as well.

Useful Links: Royal Horticultural Society IrelandIrish Garden Plant SocietyGarden & Landscape Design Association.

WHY CHOOSE US FOR YOUR PAVING JOB:

Buckland Common is a hamlet in Buckinghamshire, England. It is located in the Chiltern Hills, 4 miles (6.4 km) east of Wendover and the same distance south of Tring in Hertfordshire with which it shares a boundary. The northern end of the settlement is delineated by a short section of Grim’s Ditch. It is in the civil parish of Cholesbury-cum-St Leonards.

Evidence of prehistoric settlement has been found in the form of a Palaeolithic handaxe found on a ploughed field’. A section of the Chiltern Grim’s Ditch linear earthwork, which is believed to have been constructed during the Iron Age, marks the northern boundary of Buckland Common. Though what remains is eroded and only a poorly preserved ditch and bank are still visible.

The area today called Buckland Common had in Edward the Confessor’s time been the southern and upland part of the manor of Buckland which was under the control of the see of Dorchester. Following the Norman Invasion, Buckland had become incorporated into the estates owned by the Church of Lincoln. This upland area would have originally comprised impenetrable scrub woodland but gradual clearance created pasture land which provided advantageous grazing for cattle and sheep. Perhaps this location was chosen on account of it being more sheltered lying as it does in a slight depression in comparison to the surrounding land. It is believed the first permanent settlement began in the 16th century, around the time when Henry VIII seized the lands from the Earl of Warwick in 1522.

Around 1540, Queen Mary I granted a tenancy to Sir Anthony Browne, whose daughter Elizabeth married Baron Richard Dormer a wealthy landowner from Wing. Richard’s descendant the First Earl of Carnarvon was killed during the English Civil War at the first Battle of Newbury. The Parliamentarians sequestrated the lands around 1653 although they were subsequently restored to the Carnarvon estate in the 1700s. By marriage it passed to the Chesterfield family and was held by Philip Stanhope, 5th Earl of Chesterfield in 1813. After his death it passed into private hands and was owned by the Lord of the Manor, Peter Parrot.

Evidence from pottery shards and a number of kilns have been found dating industrial activity to before 1700. These made use of local clay deposits from clay pits, of which a number of which have been identified, to make pottery with a distinctive manganese-brown. This activity contributed to the development of the settlement during the first part of the 18th century. Fine examples of this pottery are to be found in the nearby Chequers Museum. Though this pottery production then ceased clay continued to be dug to support a thriving brick making industry which survived into the 20th century. Agriculture provided the main employment during the 19th and first half of the 20th centuries, though a cider factory which opened in the 1900s was for a time also an important part of the local economy.