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Newton Longville sits just on the southwestern edge of Milton Keynes, effectively separated from the city's grid system by the A421 and a thin buffer of rolling North Buckinghamshire countryside. For many, it serves as a bridge between two worlds: you have the grid roads and high-speed rail links of Central Milton Keynes ten minutes away, yet the village itself retains a distinct, older identity centred around the 12th-century St Faith’s Church. The layout is characteristically linear, stretching along the Whaddon Road and Westbrook End, where timber-framed thatched cottages still stand alongside more modern developments. Historically, the village was shaped by the brickmaking industry, a nod to the heavy clay soil of the area, and while the brickworks are long gone, that industrial heritage is still visible in the architecture of the local school and older terraced rows. It’s a practical spot for those who need to get into London or Oxford but prefer to come home to a place with its own village green, a traditional pub, and views out towards the brick-built water tower that remains a landmark on the horizon.