Expert Driveway Installation Services in East Goscote
We have expertise in driveway installation across East Goscote with our skilled team. We specialise in block paving, resin, tarmac driveways, ensuring a perfect finish for your home.
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- Over 20 Years of Experience
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Types Of Driveways We Install
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Transform the look of your home with our expert driveway solutions. Contact us now for a complimentary, no-obligation quote.
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#1 Driveway Company In East Goscote
Based in East Goscote, we’re a professional paving and driveway company that specialises in providing the best new driveway and landscaping services.
We have a team of hardworking pavers and driveway installers who will ensure that you’ll receive a service that exceeds your expectations.
From resin bound to block paving and patio installations, Shire Driveways & Landscapes are the teams to call on.
As experts in new driveway services in East Goscote, we only use professional tools and are fully equipped with high-quality materials, this is to make sure that you’re happy with your new patio or driveway.
New Driveways East Goscote
Is your East Goscote driveway in desperate need of repair or replacement? Want a new drive in time for summer?
Let Shire Driveways help you create a beautiful driveway! At Shire Driveways, we offer an extensive range of driveway services.
We offer a full design and installation service and cover everything from block paving to resin and much more.
No matter what type of driveway you might require, we have you covered. All work is carried out to the highest standards and we always go the extra mile for our customers.
Whether you’re looking for a tarmac driveway or would like a block paving specialist to provide block paving services, we have something for everyone.
We pride ourselves on the first-class service we give to all of our customers throughout East Goscote and the local area, and our team are hardworking, expert driveway installers committed to doing a fantastic job for every project, regardless of the size.
A wide range of quality products is used to ensure complete customer satisfaction with all of our East Goscote driveway installations.
52°42′52″N 1°03′15″W / 52.71448°N 1.05404°W / 52.71448; -1.05404 East Goscote is a modern village and civil parish in the Borough of Charnwood district of Leicestershire, England, just north of the market town of Syston. It is a medium-sized village, with a population measured at 2,866 in the 2011 census. The village is twinned with Fleury-sur-Andelle, France.
The village’s name either derives from the Old English gos-cot meaning ‘cottages where geese are kept’, or from an Anglo-Saxon named Gosa.
The name is taken from the East Goscote Hundred, one of the old hundreds (an area of land purported to be able to support 100 families) of Leicestershire. The Goscote Hundred (or Wapentake) is mentioned in the Domesday Book, this was later split into the West and East Goscote Hundreds.
It was the first new village to be created in Leicestershire since Domesday.
The village is built on the site of a former British Army supply depot. According to Ministry of Defence (MoD) files, the site was originally constructed in 1940 (finished September 1942) by Holloway Brothers, and was an Agency Filling Factory run by Lever Brothers/Unilever as No.10 Royal Ordnance Factory (10 ROF). At that time, it was known as the Queniborough Depot, since that was the closest village to it. It began production in March/April 1942. The aerial photograph reveals its former road layout. According to English Heritage’s reference work Dangerous Energy, it was operating Groups 8-10 of ROF filling types (High Explosives received, mixed, and put into bombs and warheads). By 1944, it was temporarily occupied by the War Office. A report of 1951 has it designated as 78 COSD (Command Ordnance Sub Depot). It was decommissioned in 1959, and subsequently bought for housing development by Jelson Homes. This development began in 1962. There were two enormous shell storage bunkers that could not be demolished, and these were earthed over and landscaped. They became known locally as the ‘Mound’, and are now part of the adjacent playing fields. These were opened to the public as part of the Queen’s Silver Jubilee celebrations in 1977, and there is a plaque near Long Furrow noting this fact.
The road called Long Furrow serves as a perimeter around the central part of the village; it also serves to mark the boundary of the former ordnance site. What is less well known is the huge network of large reinforced concrete tunnels that lay beneath the whole village; where the munitions were fitted with their warheads, and new top secret weapons prototypes were put together. There are several entrances to these workshops and tunnels located throughout the village, but each have been carefully landscaped to conceal their identity. Council representatives did enter these chambers, and found that the tunnels were in excellent condition, and the electricity still worked. Until the mid-1970s, during which the village was still under construction, both entrances to the ‘Mound’ were open, and often visited by local children.
A map of the actual tunnel layout did exist in the Library of Wreake Valley Community College, Syston, but was misplaced to keep the tunnels hidden. The whole structure, and stories that lay beneath its present inhabitants is worthy of a serious study, survey, and television documentary.
The first family to move in did so in 1965, even though the village lacked many amenities at the time, including street lighting.
The village is served by Broomfield County Primary School, which was opened in 1968. The school was expanded in 1977 to cope with the number of children on the village.
The original design made no mention of the village hall, and this was built by Jelson Homes free of charge. It was the home of religious services until the completion of St Hilda’s Church in 1976. The first village vicar was the Reverend Dudley Gummer, who took services in his own house in Coopers Nook, until the village hall was built.
The village had its own magazine East Goscote Community News, which was first published in 1969. It ceased publication in the mid-1980s, after many issues. Now they have a magazine called Long Furrow.
Adjacent to the village, north of the railway line, is Beedles Lake Golf Club.
East Goscote ward is represented on Charnwood Borough Council by Green Party Councillor Laurie Needham. Before 2015, it was represented by Cathy Duffy, the only elected representative in the locality from the far-right British National Party (BNP).
Charnwood Borough Council has stated that there will be a new railway station to open at East Goscote, on the railway line towards Melton Mowbray.
East GoscoteGet Your Free Driveway Quote Today!
Transform the look of your home with our expert driveway solutions. Contact us now for a complimentary, no-obligation quote.
Our Services
Shire Driveways & Landscapes proudly covers all areas within Leicestershire, delivering expert driveway installation and landscaping services.
Our local presence enables us to understand and cater to the specific needs of our valued customers in these regions.