Bewdley Conservation Area
Bewdley Conservation Area was designated in 1968 and reviewed in
1976, and is 42.8 hectares (105.7 acres) in extent. It comprises
the town centre, adjoining residential streets, part of the River
Severn, adjoining river frontages and other landscape features, and
part of the old settlement of Wribbenhall. The surviving built
component of the Conservation Area dates primarily from the
fifteenth to the nineteenth centuries, although settlement in the
area predates this period.
The Conservation Area is at the heart of the town of Bewdley that
is itself set in and hidden by unspoilt undulating countryside. The
Area includes a large proportion of the town and in places abuts
open countryside; hence the rural setting of the town is an
important component of its character and in turn that of the
Conservation Area. Much of this countryside was recognised in the
Worcestershire County Development Plan during the 1950s as being an
Area of Great Landscape Value, and has been recognised in
successive Local Plans as having high local landscape quality. To
the west, north and south lie the Wyre Forest and its outliers,
which are recognised as being of national importance to nature
conservation. The urban fringe to the east of the river is entirely
allocated as Green Belt. It is important to conserve the rural
setting of the town and Conservation Area, and in so doing to
recognise the interrelationships between the Area and overall
setting.
The River Severn is a significant feature forming a valley through
the centre of the Conservation Area and Town. Here the channel
varies in width between approximately 40 and 55 metres. The
riverbanks are, for the most part in this location, revetted with
natural sandstone blocks that historically formed quaysides.
Importantly, the River brings the countryside into the town,
particularly as to the north and south, the town is pinched inwards
in plan towards the River. In addition, there is only one bridge
over the River in the town centre and Conservation Area, meaning
views upstream and downstream from the bridge itself and adjoining
quaysides towards the countryside are uninterrupted and
continuous.
The Conservation Area has considerable architectural and historic
interest. The town’s origins as a principal crossing point of the
River Severn during medieval times and as an inland port
established it as a thriving centre for trade, which continued
until the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Its prosperity is
reflected in many buildings, particularly those constructed during
the late middle ages and Georgian periods; which have stamped a
clear and unmistakable character on the town, and generally
comprise a clear lead for new development to follow. The
construction of the railway station during the mid. 19th century
brought Victorian architectural influences, particularly to parts
of Wribbenhall.
View the Bewdley
Character Appraisal
(2.58MB)