Greater Peterborough · The joining wards
Meet the nine
Nine wards of western Huntingdonshire — market-town streets, growing new communities and quiet village greens — proposed to join the city as part of Greater Peterborough. This is their roll call.
Every one of these communities already looks towards Peterborough — for work, shopping, study and healthcare. Under the Option D proposal they would leave Huntingdonshire District Council and Cambridgeshire County Council behind and be served by one new unitary authority, alongside every existing city ward.
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01 / 09
Alconbury
Growing communityAlconbury and Alconbury Weston, together with the fast-growing Alconbury Weald development rising on the old airfield.
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02 / 09
Brampton
Village & parklandBrampton village and the Hinchingbrooke area on the western edge of Huntingdon, with its country park on the doorstep.
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03 / 09
Huntingdon East
Market townThe eastern side of Huntingdon, taking in the historic town centre and Hartford beside the Great Ouse.
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04 / 09
Huntingdon North
Town neighbourhoodsThe northern neighbourhoods of Huntingdon, including Oxmoor and Sapley.
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05 / 09
Kimbolton
Historic & ruralA large rural ward around historic Kimbolton, reaching out to the villages along the western edge of the county.
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06 / 09
Sawtry
A1 corridorSawtry and its neighbouring villages along the A1(M), midway between Huntingdon and Peterborough.
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07 / 09
Stilton, Folksworth & Washingley
Villages & countrysideStilton — the village that gave its name to the cheese — with Folksworth, Washingley and their surrounding countryside just south of the city.
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08 / 09
The Stukeleys
Between town & cityGreat Stukeley, Little Stukeley and Stukeley Meadows, sitting between Huntingdon and Alconbury.
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09 / 09
Yaxley (includes Farcet)
City's neighbourThe large village of Yaxley and its surrounding parishes, sitting immediately south of the Peterborough urban area.
Ward boundaries © Office for National Statistics; contains OS data © Crown copyright and database right 2025. Basemaps © OpenStreetMap contributors © CARTO.