Welcome To AG Paving Contractors Sandford St Martin, OX7

AG Paving is Sandford St Martin, OX7 based paving contractor that serves Sandford St Martin and surrounding areas. We offer a large range of paving and landscaping services at economical costs. We provide a total service; consultation, style, supply, and installation. Whether you are searching for a total garden overhaul or an easy tidy up we make sure to have the ideal option to fit both your taste and budget plan. We have a huge series of patio and paving alternatives for you to choose from including; Indian sandstone, granite, limestone, cobblelock, gravel and concrete pieces simply to name a couple of. We specialise in the installation of natural stone paving, for both driveways and outdoor patios. Our quality and costs will not be beaten. Why not check out our gallery to see our large selection of paving alternatives and we make certain you’ll discover something to suit your taste. We source our quality products from only the very best and well prominent providers to guarantee that the paving we provide to you will stand the test of time. Quality products paired with our experience in setup suggests that you can rest ensured you will have a lovely driveway or patio for years to come.

AG Paving Sandford St Martin, OX7 – Driveways, Patio and Garden Contractors

A lovely new driveway or patio location will make a considerable change to your house. We provide a wide array in paving designs to suit any styled property, be it of modern, standard or contemporary design.

We likewise offer a wide variety of colour and style alternatives from which you can select the most proper design of paving in Sandford St Martin for your house. We will offer recommendations on design, layout and all technical elements of the driveway or patio setup.

We set up a wide variety of domestic and commercial paving; from forecourts, driveways, courses and outdoor patios 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 much easier but can likewise include worth to your property and improve its appearance. Selecting the most appropriate paving system for your house is very essential as it represents a long-lasting investment in your residential or commercial property. All our work is carried out by our own extremely knowledgeable paving contractor in Sandford St Martin, OX7.

As soon as you have actually chosen the style and colour mix, you can then likewise select from a series of customized created features such as circles, diamonds and even having your initials embedded. This will ensure your paving is really unique.

UK best rated paving contractors in Sandford St Martin, OX7

Our services include:

Driveways Sandford St Martin, OX7

We are specialists at Driveways Sandford St Martin. We can lay and develop budget friendly and custom driveways for our consumers. All our work is done to the highest of requirements. We use just quality driveway products beginning from the installation of your base to the completed surface area of your driveway to make sure a durable driveway installation.

Paving Sandford St Martin, OX7

We pride ourselves on the quality of our Paving Sandford St Martin. We use a paving service that includes laying paving, changing old driveways and developing patio areas with garden paving in Sandford St Martin, OX7.

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 PICK US FOR YOUR PAVING TASK:

Sandford St Martin is a village and civil parish in West Oxfordshire about 7 miles (11 km) east of Chipping Norton and about 12 miles (19 km) south of Banbury. The 2011 Census recorded the parish’s population as 209.

The parish measures about 4 miles (6 km) north–south, just over 1 mile (1.6 km) wide east–west at its widest point, and covers an area of 2,292 acres (928 ha). It northern boundary is the B4031 road linking Swerford Heath and Deddington. It is bounded in the south by a field boundary just south of the B4030 road linking Enstone and Westcott Barton. Streams form parts of the eastern boundary. The remainder of the parish is bounded by field boundaries.

The highest point in the parish is Sandford Belt, which is on the western boundary of the parish about 12 mile (800 m) west of Ledwell and about 590 feet (180 m) above sea level. Sandford St Martin village is in the south of the parish around a former ford across Tyte brook, a tributary of the River Dorn. About 1 mile (1.6 km) north of the village is the hamlet of Ledwell, which is on Cockley Brook. In the north of the parish is Grove Ash, which is the site of a deserted Medieval village that used to be a separate township.

The village was called Sandford until about 1884, when the suffix “St Martin” was added to distinguish it from Sandford-on-Thames elsewhere in Oxfordshire and Dry Sandford in what was then the neighbouring part of Berkshire. The centre of the village is a small triangular green, on which is a stone cross. The base is Medieval. The shaft probably dates from a restoration in 1856 by the Gothic Revival architect GE Street. The head is 20th-century. Sandford’s current manor house was built about 1715, but it may include parts of an earlier house.

Opposite the parish church is Sandford Park, which was built about 1700 and has a later 18th-century west wing. A north wing was added in the early 20th century and demolished in 1954. The house is a Grade II* listed building. In the 18th and 19th centuries there was a pub in Sandford near the Manor House. In 1774 it was licensed as the Silver Tavern. It was briefly renamed the Taylor’s Arms, and from 1788 was called the Crown. It ceased trading early in the 1880s and was converted to a residential property, allegedly because Edward Marshall, then occupant of the Manor House, objected to it being so near his home.