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Steventon sits in the Vale of White Horse, positioned just south of Abingdon and the A34. The village is famously characterized by the Causeway, a raised medieval stone path lined with trees that runs for nearly a mile, originally constructed to keep residents' feet dry from the flood-prone marshland. This path connects the historic end of the village - home to the 14th-century church of St Michael and All Angels - to the more modern areas. Architecturally, the village is a mix of heavy timber-framed cottages and newer developments, centered around several long-standing pubs and a large village green. While the Great Western Main Line runs directly through the village, the station has been closed since the 1960s, meaning locals generally head to nearby Didcot Parkway for rail links to London and Bristol. The surrounding landscape is largely level farmland, though the hills of the North Wessex Downs are visible to the south, and the village maintains a distinct sense of separation from the expanding urban edges of its larger neighbours.