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Stoke Gifford sits on the northern fringe of Bristol, effectively bridges the gap between the city’s industrial past and its role as a modern regional hub. While the village is mentioned in the Domesday Book, its modern identity is defined largely by its position at a major transport crossroads; it is home to Bristol Parkway station, which provides the primary rail link to London and South Wales. The landscape is a mix of the old village core, centered around the 14th-century St Michael's Church, and expansive twentieth-century developments like Bradley Stoke and the University of the West of England’s Frenchay campus. Much of the local life revolves around the parish rooms and the expansive green space of Meade Park, while the nearby Hewlett Packard and MoD Abbey Wood sites anchor the local economy. It’s a practical, well-connected spot where the boundaries between Bristol’s urban sprawl and the South Gloucestershire countryside begin to blur.