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Hall Green sits about six miles southeast of Birmingham city centre, serving as a settled residential suburb that still retains a surprising amount of open space. The area is perhaps most famous for Sarehole Mill, an 18th-century water mill that served as a childhood haunt for J.R.R. Tolkien; the nearby Shire Country Park follows the River Cole and provides a corridor of greenery that makes it easy to forget how close you are to the city. The local geography is anchored by the Stratford Road, which offers straightforward access to the M42 and the shops of Shirley, while the railway station puts Birmingham Moor Street just a fifteen-minute journey away. Architecturally, the landscape is defined by its mix of inter-war semi-detached houses and pockets of Victorian terraces, particularly around the borders of Moseley. While the well-known greyhound stadium closed its doors a few years ago to make way for housing, the area remains a practical, well-connected spot where the suburban sprawl is broken up by established parks and the quiet flow of the canal.