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Routes
Bike touring routes & trails
United Kingdom
England
South East England
Chestfield

View of the North Sea – Whitstable Harbour loop from Chestfield & Swalecliffe

Routes
Bike touring routes & trails
United Kingdom
England
South East England
Chestfield

View of the North Sea – Whitstable Harbour loop from Chestfield & Swalecliffe

Moderate

4.7

(22)

82

riders

View of the North Sea – Whitstable Harbour loop from Chestfield & Swalecliffe

02:15

38.0km

130m

Cycling

Moderate bike ride. Good fitness required. Mostly paved surfaces. Suitable for all skill levels. The starting point of the route is accessible with public transport.

Last updated: May 7, 2026

Tips

Includes a segment in which cycling is not permitted

After 18.0 km for 79 m

Waypoints

A

Start point

Train Station

Get Directions

1

1.96 km

View of the North Sea

Highlight • Viewpoint

Often windswept, Rugged unchanging landscape fringed by beaches

Tip by

2

3.69 km

Whitstable Harbour

Highlight • Structure

There is a lovely little market at Whitstable Harbour. It has expanded enormously over the years and now has some really excellent, trendy restaurants as well as arts and crafts stalls where you can find some gems. There are also a number of very cheap stalls selling fresh fish and takeaway food just outside the market itself.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

3

4.66 km

Crab and Winkle Way Tunnel Mural

Highlight • Structure

4

13.1 km

Graveney Church Plums

Highlight • Forest

Green gauges and Red plumbs local and free

Tip by

5

19.5 km

Faversham Creek

Highlight • Viewpoint

Primarily a walking path with Gates and Fences, Can be Ridden, Muddy in the winter, Dusty in the summer. Can be accessed from Faversham or Oare for walks or rides in either direction along the Creek., Lookout for Bites to eat in the Shipyard Caravan Cafe and browse nautical antiques in the Shops after

Tip by

6

19.7 km

Market Place, Faversham

Highlight • Monument

Faversham Antiques Market is held in Market Place and Court Street. It is held on the first Sunday of every month

Tip by

7

19.9 km

Abbey Street, Faversham

Highlight • Historical Site

In the 12th century a highway was laid out as a grand approach to the Abbey which had survived Henry VIII's dissolution of the monasteries to become a residential area popular with anyone who owed their livelihood to the Creek, whether as merchant, craftsman or seaman.

Toward the end of the 19th century its middle-class residents started moving to new houses elsewhere in the town, and many of its properties became tenanted. The new occupiers were often much poorer than their predecessors. Landlords neglected the properties and so the street came to look 'down-at-heel'. Determination to build a 'brave new world' after the end of the Second World War encouraged local councils to sweep away houses that lacked modern amenities. Most of those in Abbey Street qualified, but they were also historic buildings of importance.

After intervention by the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings, an ingenious pioneering scheme launched by Faversham Borough Council in the late 1950s saved them from the fate that overtook many of their counterparts elsewhere. Apart from Arden's House (No 80), none of the properties is of outstanding national importance, and so they were not eligible for historic building repair grants. However, collectively they are of national importance, and so the first 'town scheme' was introduced to make them eligible. Most of them were bought by the council under slum-clearance powers, and their occupants re-housed elsewhere.

However, instead of being demolished the properties in Abbey Street were sold to sympathetic owners who covenanted with the council to restore them under the supervision of an architect with experience of historic building care. To cover its costs, the council made a slight profit on each - buying the smaller houses for about £250 each and then selling them for about £300.

In other historic towns, streets were being brutally widened, but in Abbey Street the carriageway was actually narrowed - the first in the UK - to reduce traffic nuisance. At the same time, the street was planted with trees.

Abbey Street is sometimes said to be the finest medieval street in southeast England. It is certainly a wonderful "gallery" of old buildings, mainly timber-framed. As already noted, the ace in the pack is Arden's House, one of the few surviving buildings of Faversham Abbey, and possibly its guesthouse. With 81 (Arden's Cottage), it originally formed a big "open courtyard" house. It dates from around 1450-1500, with remains of the Abbey outer gatehouse of c 1200, which spanned the street here.

Tip by

8

22.9 km

switchback on graveney to Faversham trail

Tip by

B

38.0 km

End point

Train Station

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Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

27.0 km

5.77 km

3.36 km

1.43 km

391 m

< 100 m

Surfaces

29.5 km

6.21 km

1.73 km

392 m

129 m

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Elevation

Elevation

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Weather

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Saturday 4 July

27°C

17°C

-- %

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