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ambleside road lined with shops and gardens at sunset with fells in backdrop

Ambleside Conservation Area

Why is Ambleside special?

Ambleside started as an early medieval settlement on the brow of a small promontory between Stock Ghyll and Scandale Beck.

In the 17th century it developed further at the foot of the hill because of  the town’s extensive wool trade and burgeoning water-powered industrial economy. The growth of the tourist trade stimulated by construction of turnpike roads from the 1760s and the arrival of the railway in Windermere in 1847, meant it expanded south- and westwards

It’s attractive architectural and historic character includes:

  • Complex street pattern partially overlaid and extended by 19th century road construction with a network of roads, streets, narrow lanes, ginnels and back lanes
  • Rural setting of the town nestling closely under the fells with a sunny south-facing aspect surrounded by fells to north, east and west and a lake to the south
  • Formal, planned 19th century redevelopment of the town centre together with suburban expansion of villas, semi-detached houses and terraces of Victorian stone built houses
  • Attractive outward views to surrounding fells, especially Loughrigg Fell
  • Architectural and historic interest of the area’s buildings, including 38 listed buildings dating from the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries
  • Good examples of Lakeland local vernacular architecture, plain18th century dwellings and Victorian suburban building
  • Large purpose-built hotels and guesthouses as testimony to the 19th century tourist industry
  • Historic associations with many notable figures including William Wordsworth,  Charlotte Mason and Harriet Martineau
  • Prevalent use of local stone, reflecting the underlying geology of the area, used for walling, roof slates and boundary walls
  • Trees in public open spaces and private gardens
  • Isolated areas of historic floorscape including stone setts, flagstone paving and cobbled water gullies

Ambleside Conservation Area resources

Ambleside Conservation Area Appraisal and Management Plan 2010
Map of Ambleside Conservation 2010