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To understand Wooburn Green, you first have to look at its geography: it sits in the valley of the River Wye, positioned between the more industrial High Wycombe and the riverside town of Bourne End. The heart of the village is its expansive, four-acre triangular green, which is fringed by a mix of Victorian cottages and older red-brick buildings that hint at the area’s history in the paper-milling industry. While it shares some urban sprawl with neighboring Loudwater, the village maintains a distinct boundary thanks to the steep, wooded hills of the Chilterns that rise up to the north and east. On a practical level, it functions as a convenient hub; the M40 passes nearby at junction 3, and while the village lost its own railway station decades ago, the branch line at Bourne End and the main line at Beaconsfield provide reliable links for those heading toward London. It is the kind of place where the scale feels manageable - a network of small shops and traditional pubs grouped tightly around the grass, with the river still tracing its way quietly behind the main streets.