1
Millpool Way, Sandbach
A fairly recent housing development behind the B&M store and on the site of the former town gas works, linking to Newall Avenue (an older area of housing off Crewe Road).
Image: © Stephen Craven
Taken: 28 Dec 2021
0.00 miles
2
Covid-19 sign, Old Mill Road, Sandbach
This message would have meant nothing before late 2021, but the Omicron variant of the Covid-19 virus was spreading rapidly through England by December. The solar-powered sign encouraged people to get a third dose of vaccine (colloquially a 'booster jab').
The road is named after a former silk mill at its southern end, no trace of which now remains.
Image: © Stephen Craven
Taken: 28 Dec 2021
0.04 miles
3
Culvert on the Dingle Brook
The culvert carries the brook under the A534 Wheelock Bypass.
Image: © Stephen Craven
Taken: 28 Dec 2021
0.04 miles
4
Northern end of the Brook Wood Trail
The trail runs through woodland for about 750m from Old Mill Road to Coronation Crescent.
Image: © Stephen Craven
Taken: 28 Dec 2021
0.04 miles
5
B&M, Old Mill Road, Sandbach
The store was built on the 'far' side of the bypass and was previously Homebase DIY.
Image: © Stephen Craven
Taken: 28 Dec 2021
0.04 miles
6
Roundabout on Sandbach Bypass
This is where the Sandbach bypass (foreground) meets the inner relief road (right, where the car with headlights is emerging) and becomes the Wheelock Bypass (far left).
Image: © Stephen Craven
Taken: 21 Jul 2012
0.05 miles
7
Sandbach, car park
Next to the ring road. Free!
Image: © Mike Faherty
Taken: 28 Dec 2012
0.08 miles
8
A533 Old Mill Road
Image: © Colin Pyle
Taken: 10 Aug 2012
0.09 miles
9
The Old Hall Hotel, Sandbach
A timber-framed building dated 1656 (from Pevsner). The 1909 OS 1:2500 map shows it to have been two buildings, the left-hand one being an inn at that time.
Image: © Humphrey Bolton
Taken: 13 Apr 2001
0.09 miles
10
Sewer across the Dingle Brook
Shown just as 'pipeline' on large scale maps, this is undoubtedly a sewer, as there used to be a sewage works just south of this location, marked on the 1930s map but already shown as disused by the 1960s. The pipe now runs through the embankment of the A534 Wheelock Bypass, presumably to a pumping station somewhere the other side.
Image: © Stephen Craven
Taken: 28 Dec 2021
0.11 miles