A South Cambridgeshire village has been described as a ‘really safe environment’
A Cambridgeshire commuter village has been praised by locals for its “small, peaceful community”. However, they complained about its “nightmare” rail crossing, which they say is becoming “worse and worse”.
Foxton is conveniently located around seven miles away from Cambridge and is home to more than 1,200 residents, according to the 2021 census. Comprising pretty little cottages, with a true village feel, Foxton offers several local amenities including a convenience store, post office, and a pub called The White Horse.
As part of our Exploring Cambridgeshire series, we spoke to residents about what they think of it. Flavia Metcalfe has lived in the village for seven years. She used to live in the centre of Cambridge, and before that, she lived in Manchester.
Flavia said she “loves” living in Foxton as it is “very safe, especially when you have kids”. She added: “You feel really assured that you’re in a really safe environment. Everyone is really friendly too.
“It’s not very diverse, but you don’t really notice it because everyone is so welcoming, so friendly, so nice. It’s a really lovely village.”
Flavia shared that housing prices are relatively expensive in the area. She said the village “makes up for it with safety and friendliness”.
House prices in Foxton have an overall average of £536,178 over the last year, according to Rightmove. In comparison, the average house price in South Cambridgeshire was £433,000 in April 2026, according to the Office for National Statistics.
Flavia described Foxton as an ideal village for commuters because you can travel into the capital “really easily” as well as having a close proximity to Cambridge. She added: “I work in Cambridge so I get the train into the city really quite easily. Generally if there wasn’t a station here, you may find it difficult. But it makes a huge, huge difference.”
Describing the amenities in Foxton, she continued: “Socially you have a pub, a shop and now you have the café. So, for a small village you have more going on than in other villages.”
However, the local said she does find Foxton’s railway crossing a “pain”, “especially for someone that commutes quite a bit”.
Flavia added: “Often, you have times where you stand there for a good five to 10 minutes and you miss the train.” She thinks a bypass would make a “huge difference”.
A 67-year-old resident, who has lived in Foxton for around 40 years, and asked to be named only as David, said the village has a “small, peaceful community”.
Explaining that plans for a bypass have been ongoing for years, he said: “I think it needs it because that level crossing is getting worse and worse.”
David added: “You get stuck. Villagers go out the back way but it is difficult. You have to build that into your equation [for travel].”
A 72-year-old man, who wished to remain anonymous, has lived in the village for a decade. He highlighted that Foxton is very “sport orientated” and is “very much” a commuter village nowadays.
He said that it is a community where “you see everybody in the mornings and you say ‘good morning’” which makes for a “friendly” village.
He agrees with other villagers calling for a bypass that “something definitely really [needs to be done] because that is the only issue you’ve got living in the village is getting out into the A10”.
He said some form of improvement would be “really good” and emphasised that plans have been ongoing for a “long time” but “nothing has really come from it”. The resident said the community doesn’t know anything anymore and feels “in the dark at the moment” about the future plans.
Kathy Dixon said there is a “big community spirit” in Foxton and there are “always things going on and when there is a village event, everybody turns up”. She thinks Covid-19 was “evidence of how much people pull together”.
At the moment, Kathy feels as though Foxton is not necessarily a commuter village because there are “plenty of retired people here”. She said: “During the day, it doesn’t turn into a ghost village, like others do.”
She said moving from Harston to Foxton was the “best thing that ever happened” to her and she feels as though it was “fate”.
Kathy said the Foxton crossing is a “nightmare” but “at least we can go round it” because it is a bit of a “rat run”. She said that the bypass plans are going to become irrelevant because “you’ve got the East West Railway coming through and whatever plans the Greater Cambridge Partnership has got”.
She continued: “It escalated in price, and I think people gave up on it [the plans]. I think since Covid-19, people are working from home, so it is probably not going to happen.”
Kathy said, if more houses were built in Foxton, she “would want to see more preservation of habitat”. She continued: “There have been some fairly aggressive planning applications at the bottom of the village. So it would be okay if it was done, but if it was done tastefully and it looked like a village, rather than just more red brick.”

You must be logged in to post a comment Login