Overview for Oughtrington Lane, LYMM, WA13 0RE
Introduction
Lymm (LIM) is a village and civil parish in the Borough of Warrington, Cheshire, England, which incorporates the hamlets of Booths Hill, Broomedge, Church Green, Deansgreen, Heatley, Heatley Heath, Little Heatley, Oughtrington, Reddish, Rushgreen and Statham. At the 2021 United Kingdom census it had a population of 12,700.
Summary for Oughtrington Lane, LYMM, WA13 0RE
Roadworks near WA13 0RE
Road Safety near WA13 0RE
Details of personal injury accidents in and around Oughtrington Lane, WA13 0RE that have been reported to Cheshire Constabulary over the past 20 years.
Traffic Levels near WA13 0RE
View traffic levels near Oughtrington Lane, WA13 0RE from official Department for Transport counts.
Images taken near to Oughtrington Lane, WA13 0RE and the surrounding area
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Police
This area is policed by Cheshire Constabulary.
Cheshire Constabulary split their policing area into 122 separate neighbourhoods and this postcode is in the Lymm neighbourhood.
Lymm Neighbourhood Crime
Top 3 Categories
For full details of all categories together with more crime information, click on the Details button.
Member of UK Parliament
This postcode is in the Warrington South parliamentary constituency.
Warrington South is a constituency in the North West region of England. The seat has been held by Andy Carter (Conservative) since December 2019.
Most Recent House Sales for Oughtrington Lane, WA13 0RE
17 Aug 2017
23 Sep 2013
8 Feb 2008
15 May 2002
Local Petrol Station Prices
Coordinates for WA13 0RE
Residents at WA13 0RE
Sunrise and Sunset at WA13 0RE
Traffic Emission and Congestion Zones
Historical Weather Summary
Clear | 17.94% |
Cloudy | 61.03% |
Rain | 7.60% |
Windy | 13.34% |
Other | 0.09% |
Population
Deprivation Index
the more deprived the postcode
Average Energy Performance
Companies Registered at WA13 0RE
Postcode Details for WA13 0RE
Recent Updates
15 Apr 2024 Schools Data updated for April 2024 |
10 Apr 2024 Companies Data updated for March 2024 |
7 Apr 2024 New option to receive automatic updates to roadworks that affect you |
7 Apr 2024 Police and Crime data updated for February 2024 |
3 Apr 2024 Sold House Price data updated for February 2024 |
30 Mar 2024 Energy Performance Certificates (England and Wales) updated February 2024 |
28 Mar 2024 New feature to use Geolocating functions to detect your current location |
17 Mar 2024 Schools Data updated for March 2024 |
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The Rural/Urban classification is based upon data collected during the 2011 Census and released in August 2013 and is categorised into 6 distinct classes.
[A] Urban Major conurbation: A built up area with a population of 10,000 (3,000 in Scotland) or more and is assigned to the major conurbation settlement category.
[B] Urban Minor conurbation: A built up area with a population of 10,000 (3,000 in Scotland) or more and is assigned to the minor conurbation settlement category.
[C] Urban City and town: A built up area with a population of 10,000 (3,000 in Scotland) or more and is assigned to the city and town settlement category.
[D] Rural Town and fringe
[E] Rural Village
[F] Rural Hamlet and isolated dwelling
The Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) is the official measure of relative deprivation.
The index is based on 39 separate indicators across seven distinct domains (Income; Employment; Health and Disability; Education, Skills and Training; Crime; Barriers to Housing and Services; Living Environment) to provide an overall measure of multiple deprivation and is calculated for every neighbourhood.
The index is relative rather than an absolute scale and so a neighbourhood with a score of 10 is more deprived than one rated 20, but this does not equate to being twice as deprived.
Please note: Different indices are used in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland and so comparison of scores from neighbourhoods in different countries should not be undertaken.
These figures report on incorporated UK companies only that are registered at this postcode and do not include sole-traders, partnerships or overseas organisations.
The population figure shown for your area are an estimate provided by the Office for National Statistics and is rounded to the nearest 1,000.
The estimates are derived from the Annual Population Survey (APS) which is the Labour Force Survey (LFS) plus various sample boosts.
There are 55 unitary authorities. They provide all local government services in their areas. These are mainly in the cities, urban areas and larger towns although there are now 6 shire county councils that are unitary (ie have no district councils beneath them).