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Universal is coming. Should Cambridgeshire care?


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Cambridgeshire Spotlight
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Universal is coming. Should Cambridgeshire care?

Graham Waite
Jun 11, 2026
The Espresso Briefing: In This Week's Spotlight |
Universal is not in Cambridgeshire. That does not mean Cambridgeshire gets to ignore it.
Universal is coming to Bedfordshire.
So why should St Neots, Huntingdon, Cambourne, Cambridge, Ely, March, Wisbech, Chatteris and St Ives care?
Because big regional projects do not politely stop at the county border.
Universal’s planned UK resort is due to open near Bedford in 2031.The government says the project involves more than £5 billion of private investment, £1.3 billion of public support for regional and local infrastructure, nearly 20,000 construction jobs, 8,000 operational jobs, and around 8.5 million visitors in its first year.
That is not just a Bedford story.
That is an A1 / A421 / A428 / A14 / East West Rail / St Neots / Huntingdon / Cambourne / Cambridge story.
It is a jobs story.
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Universal Is Coming. Is Cambridgeshire Ready — Or Just Nearby? |
The most interesting thing about Universal’s planned UK resort is not only the rides.
It is the ripple.
The actual site is near Bedford, around the former Kempston Hardwick brickworks area. But draw a practical map and Cambridgeshire starts appearing very quickly.
St Neots is the obvious one.
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St Neots Might Be The Cambridgeshire Town To Watch
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If Universal creates a Bedfordshire boom, St Neots could be one of the first Cambridgeshire towns people start talking about differently.
It already sits on the A1.
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East West Rail Suddenly Feels Less Theoretical |
For years, East West Rail has sounded to many people like one of those future transport conversations that lives mainly in consultation PDFs.
Universal changes the mood.
East West Rail is proposing a new railway line between Bedford Station and Cambridge Station, plus associated works.Cambridgeshire County Council says the project would be determined by the Secretary of State for Transport through a Development Consent Order.
East West Rail’s own consultation material describes the DCO process as the permission route for the new railway between Bedford and Cambridge, with additional upgrades between Oxford and Bedford and around Cambridge.
In plain English, this is not just “rail for Cambridge.”
It touches the wider Bedford–St Neots–Cambourne–Cambridgeargument:
If you live in Cambourne, St Neots, Cambridge, Hardwick, Toft, Comberton, the Eversdens, Shelford or nearby villages, this is not hypothetical.
Leanne in Cambourne said: “Every transport promise sounds brilliant until the orange fencing appears near your village.”
That is the East West Rail debate in one sentence.Would you use a better Cambridge–Bedford rail link, or does the disruption worry you more than the promise?Useful links:
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The Solar Farm Row Turning South Cambridgeshire Into A National Energy Argument
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Universal is not the only huge project forcing Cambridgeshire to ask what “progress” actually costs.
There is also the solar farm row.
Kingsway Solar Farm is proposed across a large area of South Cambridgeshire, with solar panels, battery storage and grid connection infrastructure.Cambridgeshire County Council says the proposal is being handled as a Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project, which means the final decision is not made by the usual local planning committee but by the Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero.
That one detail matters.
Because if you live near Balsham, West Wratting, Weston Colville, Willingham Green, Carlton, Brinkley, Six Mile Bottom or Burwell, this is not an insignificant green-energy debate.
It is the landscape around you.
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Yes To Solar, But Where - Are We All REALLY Solar NIMBYS? |
This is where the debate gets more honest.
Because “do you support renewable energy?” is too easy.
Most people will say yes.
The harder question is:
Where should it go?On rooftops?
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The Villages Caught Between Clean Energy & Local Say
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You’ve probably noticed the pattern forming in this issue.
Universal.
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The Same Planning Problem Keeps Appearing In Cambridgeshire |
This is the bit that links the whole issue.
With Kingsway Solar, Cambridgeshire County Council says the host planning authorities are not the deciding bodies because the project sits in the Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project process.
With Greater Cambridge’s proposed urban development corporation, South Cambridgeshire District Council has warned that planning powers could be moved away from local councils.Cambridge City Council has said the development corporation could become the planning authority for decisions above 250 homes.
With East West Rail, people are being asked to think about route design, construction, land, stations, disruption and long-term benefit.
Different files.
Same reader question:
When something big lands near us, who actually has the power to change it?
This is why planning and infrastructure stories matter even when they sound dry.
They decide:
So yes, Cambridgeshire needs homes.
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The Universal Jobs Question Local Businesses Should Not Ignore |
Universal expects nearly 20,000 construction jobs and 8,000 direct operational jobs when the resort opens, rising over time.The project website also says around 80% of employees at opening are expected to come from Bedfordshire and surrounding areas.
“Surrounding areas” is where Cambridgeshire businesses should start paying attention.
Because this is not only about people working on rides.
It could affect:
For some businesses, Universal could mean opportunity.
For others, it could mean staff competition, wage pressure, higher customer expectations and another reason good trades and hospitality workers get harder to find.
Amira in Huntingdon said: “Everyone says jobs like it’s automatically good news. But if you already can’t get staff, it’s more complicated than that.”
That is the bit press releases rarely dwell on.
Button instruction:
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Will The Fens Feel The Benefit — Or Just Hear About It? |
Here is the awkward Cambridgeshire question.
If the Universal effect travels through Bedford, St Neots, Huntingdon, Cambourne and Cambridge, where does that leave March, Wisbech, Chatteris, Ely and the wider Fens?
Because “regional growth” has a habit of sounding exciting from a stage and much thinner when it reaches places already fighting for better roads, better transport, better town-centre footfall and better access to jobs.
The corridor towns may get the first lift.
The Fens may get the headline but not the help.
Or maybe that is too cynical. Maybe better regional transport, tourism, training and business confidence could eventually spread wider.
So let’s ask it properly.
If you’re in March, Wisbech, Chatteris, Ely, Littleport or around the Fens:Does Universal feel relevant to you or does it feel like another “good news for the region” story that happens somewhere else?
Tracey in March said: “If this is good news for March, someone needs to explain the route from the press release to Broad Street.”
That is a fair challenge.
Button instruction:
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Quick Vote: Which Cambridgeshire Row Will People Still Be Arguing About Next Year? |
Quick vote: which Cambridgeshire row will people still be arguing about next year?
A. Universal and whether St Neots / Huntingdon benefit or just get busier
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Are We Getting Simpler Local Government — Or Just New Names On The Same Confusion? |
Local government reform is one of those topics that sounds dry until it changes who does what, who you contact, who fixes things, who makes planning decisions and who gets blamed when nothing happens.
Earlier this year, Cambridgeshire councils submitted options for local government reorganisation, including unitary council structures.
One option backed by Cambridge City, East Cambridgeshire and South Cambridgeshire councils would create two new unitary councils:
Other options were also submitted through the government consultation.In human terms, that means:
That sounds neat & tidy on a slide.
But local people will ask the normal questions:
This is exactly the sort of story that needs plain English, not council-speak. So have your say ...Tell us whether local government reform sounds a good idea, worrying, or just another layer of confusion.
Here's A Useful Link
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The Town-Centre Test Nobody Official Seems Keen To Take |
Forget branding. Forget “vibrancy.”Forget another phrase about footfall.
Here is the real town-centre test:
Can a parent, older resident, disabled visitor, worker on lunch break or grandparent with children actually use the place without the trip turning into a small military like operation?
That means:
Apply that test to Cambridge, Ely, Huntingdon, St Neots, March, Wisbech, St Ives and Cambourne and you get a much more honest picture than any glossy town-centre strategy.
Cambridge City Council lists public toilets at key city locations, including details such as accessible toilets and baby-changing facilities, and notes that some accessible toilets need a Radar key.
That is the kind of small practical detail that can decide whether a family, older resident or disabled visitor stays in town or cuts the visit short.
Now apply the same test beyond Cambridge:
Elaine in Ely said: “If you’re out with grandchildren, toilets decide the day. That’s not glamorous, it’s just true.”
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The “Free” Day Out That Somehow Costs £31.40 Before Anyone Has Relaxed |
A “free” day out is one of Britain’s great works of fiction.
You leave the house feeling smug. No tickets. No big attraction fee. Just fresh air, a park, maybe a river, maybe somewhere the children can run about without you paying £18 each to look at a goat.
Then reality arrives.
Parking. Drinks. Ice cream. “Can I have one of those?” Someone needs the toilet. Someone else is suddenly starving.
Ferry Meadows is a perfect example of the “free-ish” day out.
Entry can be free, but parking is currently listed from £2.60 for up to one hour to £7.80 for over eight hours, with charges applying all day, every day.
So the free trip is only free if nobody eats, drinks, asks for an ice cream, needs a café stop, or falls in love with something from a gift shop.
The local shortlist worth testing:
Marta in Ely said: “The best day out is the one where nobody cries in the car park.”
Hard to improve on that.
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Guess The Real Cost: The Free Family Afternoon |
A family goes out for a “free” afternoon. Parking, two coffees, two children’s drinks, ice cream, fuel and one “while we’re here” extra. Is it under £10, £10–£20, £20–£35, or £35+? |
The Local Café You Would Actually Send Visitors To |
If Universal brings more attention to the Bedford/Cambridge corridor, Cambridgeshire cafés need to pass the real recommendation test.
Not “is it pretty?”
More like:
We want names from St Neots, Huntingdon, Ely, Cambridge, St Ives, March, Wisbech, Cambourne, villages and garden-centre stops.
Not just the obvious city-centre places in Cambridge, Peterborough or Ely.Not just famous places.Not just the ones that look nice on Instagram.
The ones people actually use.
Julie in Ely said: “If I’m sending visitors somewhere, I need toilets, parking nearby, and cake that does not make the whole stop feel overpriced.”
That is the true café test in 2026.Nominate one café, tearoom or coffee stop you would actually send visitors to. |
Quick vote: What Should Cambridgeshire Fix First? |
Every place has a “this would be lovely if only…” problem.
If you had to pick one, what should Cambridgeshire fix first?
A. Parking
This is not scientific.
It is more useful than that.
It tells us what actually stops people using local places.
Mark in St Ives said it bluntly:
“Everything is nearby until you try doing it with children, an older relative or no spare hour.”
Button instruction:
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The Mortgage Rumour That Makes People Panic |
Someone somewhere is always predicting disaster.
Rates are going to 8%.
Someone somewhere will say St Neots is about to boom.
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Family-friendly, or Just Children-Allowed? |
There is a huge difference between family-friendly and children-allowed.
Children-allowed means nobody stops you bringing them in.
Family-friendly means the place has thought about real life.
That means:
“Family-friendly” should not mean “we have one high chair and vibes.”
The unfiltered test is this:
Would you recommend it to a tired parent, a grandparent, and a child who has just declared they hate every sandwich on earth?
If yes, we want it.
This matters even more if Cambridgeshire starts getting more visitor spillover.
Near St Neots or Huntingdon for a future Universal trip may still need somewhere easy to eat the night before yes, it is a while away, but businesses will start positioning long before the gates open.A grandparent in Ely may still need somewhere manageable for a birthday lunch.A parent in Cambridge may still need somewhere that does not treat children like a design flaw.
Tom and Becky in St Ives summed it up:“Family-friendly is when you relax. Children-allowed is when you spend the whole time apologising.”
Send us a properly family-friendly local place, not just somewhere that technically lets children in. |
Would You Pay More Rent To Keep The Dog? |
This one gets people talking because it is not really about rent. It is about the dog.
Private tenants in England now have the right to request a pet, and landlords cannot unreasonably refuse, although tenants still need to ask properly and landlords can still have fair reasons for saying no.
Shelter’s professional update says the Renters’ Rights Act pet-request changes apply from 1 May 2026, and GOV.UK guidance says a tenant should ask in writing and include a description of the pet.
So let’s ask the real question.
Would you pay more rent to keep the dog?
£25 more a month? 50?
This is where Suzanne at Y-US Lettings can be useful, because renters and landlords both need the plain-English version rather than social media panic.
Useful links:
GOV.UK landlord guide — If a tenant wants a pet
If you’re a renter or landlord with a pet/renting question, send it in and we’ll use future questions to shape a practical local Q&A. |
The Groomer Who Sends The Dog Home Looking Like They Own The Street |
Some dogs come back from the groomer looking tidy.
Some come back looking like they have acquired a small mortgage, a LinkedIn profile and strong opinions about garden furniture.
This is our pet-service nomination.
Who is the groomer, walker, pet shop, secure field or dog-friendly local place you would recommend without hesitation?
Not the one nearest.
The one you trust.
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The Dog Was Fine Until The Café Got Busy |
Every dog owner knows the sentence:
“They’re usually fine.” Usually fine at home.
This is where training is not about being harsh.
It is about helping the dog cope before the situation gets too big.
Raimonda’s Smarter Paws Hub is useful here because many owners do not need a lecture. They need simple, repeatable things to practise before the café/pub/holiday chaos begins.
Signs your dog may be struggling:
Use this to get access to the free Smarter Paws Hub material and start with practical dog-training help. |
The Crack In The Wall: Harmless, Expensive, Or “Please Stop Googling”? |
A crack in the wall has two stages.
Stage one: you notice it.
The sensible answer is usually less dramatic, but not always.
Things that can matter:
This is exactly the sort of topic where a surveyor can become the calm local voice readers remember.
Because “probably fine” is not the same as checked.
Send the property worry you’d like a surveyor to explain in plain English. |
Who Actually Turns Up When They Say They Will? |
This is the main reader-built asset for this issue.
We are starting the:
Reliable Local Home & Garden People listNot a glossy business directory.
A reader-led list of people who:
We’re looking for:
Karen in March said: “I’ll recommend anyone who turns up, explains the price and doesn’t make me chase them.”
That may be the most honest local business review system ever invented.
Recommend someone reliable for home, garden or local service work. Please include the area they cover. |
One-Line Review: Describe A Local Service In 12 Words |
Try it.
“Answered messages, turned up, fixed the fence, didn’t make it weird.”
Or:
“Great job, fair price, no disappearing act, would use again.”
Your turn.
Twelve words. One local person or business. Why would you recommend them?
Send a one-line review for someone local worth recommending.
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Before You Knock Through That Wall, Ask This First |
Open-plan living has a lot to answer for.
So does Instagram.
Before anyone knocks through a wall because a kitchen island looked nice online, ask the dull questions first.
They are dull for about six seconds, then suddenly very important.
Planning Portal explains that load-bearing internal walls transfer loads from other parts of the structure down to the foundations, and that work to provide new internal walls generally requires approval under Building Regulations. Its internal-wall guidance is worth checking before anyone starts swinging a hammer.
Useful links:
Cambridgeshire County Council — residential planning and building regulations |
The Garden Job Everyone Leaves Until It Starts Looking Personal |
There is a point where a garden stops being “a bit wild” and starts making accusations.
The hedge is judging you.
So what is the garden job you are pretending not to see?
A. Hedge
This is not just a funny question. It is also a very good way to find which local gardeners, landscapers, garden centres and home-service people readers actually rate.
Tell us the garden job you’re ignoring, or recommend someone who sorts this properly.
Quick Garden Poll: Hedge, patio, lawn, fence, shed, or “the whole thing has chosen violence”? |
The Garden Job That Gives You A Back Problem By Sunday Tea |
Gardening is healthy until it is not.
One minute you are “just doing a bit.”
Three hours later you are walking like a folding chair and negotiating with the stairs.
Common culprits:
The practical test:
If pain is sharp, spreading, getting worse, affecting sleep, causing numbness/tingling, or not easing after a few days, do not just keep “seeing how it goes” while leaning sideways at the kettle.
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“I Thought She Was Going To Choke To Death” |
This is why first aid cannot be treated like a box-ticking certificate that lives in a drawer.
A colleague chokes.
Suddenly the important question is not “did we do a course once?”
It is:
Would anyone know what to do in the first 60 seconds?
The NHS says that if choking is mild, the person will usually be able to speak, cry, cough or breathe, and should be encouraged to cough; it also warns not to put fingers in someone’s mouth if you cannot see the object, because you risk pushing it further down.
British Red Cross guidance says that if coughing does not work, you may need to give up to five back blows, then up to five abdominal thrusts, and call 999 if the person is still choking.
That is the story-led version of first aid.
Not paperwork. Not theory.
A real moment where ordinary people need to act before help arrives.
Useful links:
British Red Cross choking first aid
Send us the first-aid question you think every local workplace, club or venue should be able to answer.
Myth Or Fact: “First aid is mostly common sense.” “Someone else will know.” “A certificate from six years ago is probably fine.”
We will let a proper first-aid trainer take this one in a future issues so if you or someone you know fits that bill please get in touch.
Send us the first-aid question you think every local workplace, club or venue should be able to answer
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Great Food With Awful Parking, Or Average Food With Easy Parking? |
A deeply important local question.
Would you choose:
A. Great food, difficult parking
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The Pub Where Watching England Feels Like An Event, Not Just A TV In The Corner |
There is a difference between “we show the football” and “this actually feels like a night.”
The good version has:
This is one for pubs, sports bars and restaurants across market towns and villages, not just Cambridge, or Peterborough
Where would you watch a big game if you wanted it to feel like an event?
Nominate a pub or venue that does match-day/night atmosphere the right way. |
The Warning Light Two Days Before The MOT |
There are few dashboard lights more dramatic than the one that appears just before the MOT.
Especially when you were already planning to “just see how it goes.”
The official MOT inspection manual covers the inspection process for cars and light commercial vehicles in England, Scotland and Wales, including items such as lamps, tyres, wipers, warning lamps and view to the front.
The official MOT checklist also includes items such as seats and seat belts, warning lamps, switches, wipers and washers.
The basic home check is not complicated:
A good local garage does not just fix cars.
It stops people turning a £12 problem into a failed test and a ruined Tuesday.
Useful links: GOV.UK MOT inspection checklist PDF
Tell us your most annoying MOT fail — and whether it could have been avoided. |
Spot The MOT Mistake: Washer fluid, wipers, bulbs, tyre tread, dashboard warning lights or all of the above because hope is not a maintenance plan? |
The Cheap Monthly Decision That Gets Expensive Later |
Some money problems do not arrive loudly.
They drip.
The subscription you forgot.
An IFA or money adviser can be useful to consult here because most people do not need a lecture just guidance.
They need someone to explain the trade-offs before a small decision becomes an expensive one.
What monthly payment do you keep meaning to review?
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The Tax Thing Self-Employed Locals Remember Too Late |
Self-employed people have a special relationship with tax.
Mostly involving avoidance until the exact moment it becomes impossible to avoid.
If you are a sole trader, landlord, freelancer, small business owner or side-hustle person, the annoying questions matter:
An accountant is not exciting until the moment they save you from an expensive mistake. Then suddenly they are very exciting.
Self-employed or running a small local business? Send us the tax/accounting question you wish someone had explained earlier. |
Who Would You Trust Near Your Hair, Skin Or Eyebrows? |
Beauty recommendations are built on trust.
Because there are some things you do not want to discover the hard way.
Hair. Skin. Brows. Lashes. Aesthetics. Nails. Treatments before a wedding, holiday, birthday, interview or “I just need to feel like myself again” moment.
The question is not just “who is good?”
It is:
Who explains things properly?
Farah in Cambourne said: “If I’d send a friend there, it goes on the list. If I’d only say it’s fine because it’s nearby, it doesn’t.”
That is the standard.
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The Treatment People Book Before Admitting They’re Nervous |
A lot of people research beauty and aesthetics treatments quietly online or stalk Instagram and Facebook looking for the best options.
They look at photos.
They ask one friend. But the real questions are often:
This is where a beauty/aesthetics/skin expert could be a useful local guide not by selling a treatment, but by explaining what people should ask before booking anything.
So if you know one you think would make a great expert for our readers please let us know.
Send the beauty/treatment question you’d want answered before booking. |
The Local Class People Keep Saying They’ll Try One Day |
The weekend stop that starts as “just popping in” and ends with cake |
There are local places where nobody “just pops in.”
Farm shops.
You go in for eggs.
You leave with bread, cake, chutney, coffee, one plant, and a vague feeling that this was still better than going to a supermarket.
Where do you go for one thing and leave with five?
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This Week, We’re Looking For These Local Businesses |
We’re building reader-led local recommendations.
Not random ads.
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Could Your Business Be Part Of The Local Conversation Before People Google? |
If you run a local business, this is the bit for you.
Spotlight works best when a business can help readers:
That might mean:
This is not about buying a banner and hoping.
It is about being included in the conversations readers are already having.
Universal may bring more attention to the region.
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Send This To The Friend Who Always Knows A Good Place |
Every group has one.
The person who knows:
Send them this issue.
They are basically our unpaid research department now.
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Final Word: Send Us The Local Tip You’d Normally Only Put In A Group Chat |
This issue is the start of a different version of Cambridgeshire Spotlight. More reader-led.
So send us the thing you’d normally only say in a group chat:
That is where the good local stuff usually starts. See you next week.
Send a local tip privately, or add it to the Facebook conversation when the post goes live. |
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