Audlem is located at the junction of the A525 and A529 roads in south Cheshire, just a mile north of the Shropshire border. The village is seven miles from Nantwich to the north; seven miles from Whitchurch to the west and a similar distance from Market Drayton to the south. It is five miles from Woore to the east.
The A525 road runs from Newcastle under Lyme and Woore from the east and Whitchurch from the west. The A529 runs from Nantwich in the north and from Market Drayton in the south. Audlem is approximately 10 miles west of the M6 - you can use Junctions 16 from the North; Jcts 15 and 14 from the South.
For those using Satnav systems, the post code for the centre of the village is CW3 0AG.
There are several bus services that service Audlem - see the Organisations/Services/Buses page here for details.
The Shropshire Union canal runs through the village and some 11,000 narrow boats a year arrive in the village which is famous for its run of 15 locks. The River Weaver is not navigable to Audlem.
Thanks to Dr Beeching, there is no longer a railway station or railway line in Audlem. There are railway stations at Nantwich and Whitchurch on the Crewe to Shrewsbury line - both stations are 7 miles from Audlem. Crewe, on the main West Coast line, is 10 miles away.
As yet, the village does not have its own airport! The nearest are Manchester (approximately 60 minutes by road); Liverpool (80 minutes); East Midlands (90 minutes) and Birmingham International (90 minutes).
The Weaver Way is a long-distance footpath and cycle way now being developed as part of the Weaver Valley Regional Park. It extends across Cheshire from Audlem in the south to Frodsham in the north. There are plans to improve the grass towpath of the Shropshire Union canal from Audlem to Nantwich in the future to make it suitable for cycling.
The South Cheshire Way crosses the Shropshire Union canal approximately 2 miles north of Audlem and the village can be reached by turning south along the Weaver Way beside the canal.
There's a good network of bridleways while horse riders are treated with consideration by local drivers who are used to both horses and horses & carriages in the area.
© May 2012 Audlem Online, Cheshire | Email: editor@audlem.org
Designed by ThenMedia Audlem