Abbey Buildings Project Celebrates Major Milestone


This evening, to celebrate how far the project has come and to build momentum for the year ahead, the chair of the Abingdon Abbey Buildings Project, Gregory Bensberg MBE, gave an update in the presence of the Lord-Lieutenant of Oxfordshire, Mrs Marjorie Glasgow BEM, and the Mayor of Abingdon, Cllr Rawda Jehanli. He thanked his predecessor, Bryan Brown, chairman from 2015–23, along with the trustees and supporters whose work has brought the project to this point.

Mrs Glasgow praised the Friends of Abingdon Abbey Buildings Trust for the progress made, saying it was important to acknowledge how far the project has come. She highlighted the years of care, fundraising, and dedication invested in the Abbey Buildings, noting that the original founders of 1944 would be proud of what is being achieved 80 years on.

She described how, once restored, the Abbey Buildings will for the first time be fully accessible, open all year, and serve as a community hub and performance space at the heart of Abingdon. Speaking on behalf of His Majesty the King, she expressed thanks for the dedication in preserving such an important part of our heritage.

Reflecting on a recent Remembrance service, she said: “We are all called to serve – some in the military, and some to fight for our country. But even if we’re not called to fight for our country, we are called to fight for a country worth fighting for, and giving your time and talent to make something like this happen achieves that ambition for us and for Abingdon.”

Architects are already preparing the RIBA Stage 4 procurement documents, with tenders for the main repairs and upgrades due to go out in the New Year.

Gregory Bensberg outlined the works planned:

* New leaded windows in the Long Gallery (two had already been installed and authorised)

Improving access
* A platform lift between the Lower Hall and Upper Gallery
* A new staircase linking the same floors
* Level routes throughout the building
* Raised floor in the undercroft for level access
* New entrances connecting the undercroft to the theatre

A welcoming entrance
* A new glass-fronted foyer (into the undercroft and to the theatre)
* Accessible toilets
* An accessible changing area for the theatre

Improving the Unicorn Theatre
* Level floor (with a smaller front pit retained)
* Gradual raked seating with new theatre seats
* Improved fittings

Heating / environmental improvements
* Replacement of old heaters with hot – and cold – air ventilation in the theatre
* New heating across the buildings

Alongside the building works, the Trust is developing a community activity plan to ensure the restored buildings are at the heart of the Abingdon community.

Mr Bensberg said that the total project cost is £5.4 million. With the National Lottery Heritage Fund providing £4 million, the Trust needs to raise £1.4 million in match funding. Of this, £1.1 million has already been secured, leaving approximately £300,000 still to raise by the end of the year to allow the project to begin next summer and be ready by the summer of 2027.

To help reach the final target, the Trust was launching a Patrons Scheme:
* Platinum — £5,000 contribution
* Gold — £2,500 contribution
* Silver — £1,000 contribution
* Bronze — a smaller contribution (need to check if interested)

Platinum to Silver patrons will appear on a Patrons Board and be invited to special events.

People can support the project with donations of any size. For details or to donate, visit: abingdonabbeybuildings.co.uk.

A New Christmas Tree Arrives on Abingdon Market Place


One moment this fine fir tree was growing in a forest, and the next it’s been cut, hauled across the country on a lorry, and stood up in Abingdon-on-Thames Market Place.

By Saturday 15th November a fence had been placed around it, and a Palestinian flag was on display as part of a pro Palestinian protest. (Bethlehem, where the Christmas story begins, is a Palestinian city in the West Bank, and so the connection is not that far fetched.)

Today, the tree was surrounded by Monday Market stalls and their vans. On the stationary stall are notebooks and 2026 diaries. 2025 seems like the fastest year ever.

Three Brands in the same premises


Over the past year, three local businesses have been moving between premises. Mez House first joined Café Aroma in its High Street location; La Bag’tte moved into Mez House’s former premises; and more recently La Bag’tte has moved in with the other two.

Bringing three brands under one roof must reduce costs. It also means you can now pop in for coffee and a baguette during the day, and a Lebanese restaurant in the evening — all in the same premises.

Lasers Over Abingdon and Fireworks at Dalton Barracks


Laser lights from the Abingdon Bonfire & Fireworks 2025 at Dalton Barracks were visible behind Abingdon School.

The event included a large funfair and bonfire, a laser show set to music,

and a firework display — some of which I caught while cycling through Shippon.

Abingdon has marked Bonfire Night for centuries. In the 17th and 18th centuries the town’s celebrations were simple, neighbourhood events: a bonfire to burn the guy on a patch of common ground to commemorate the failure of the Gunpowder Plot.

Today’s combination of lasers, music, and fireworks would have been unimaginable to our forebears. And what would they have made of holding the celebration ten days after 5th November? Firework displays have moved to weekend dates, with large organised displays, and complicated traffic-management plans.