Welcome to Bristol, a city that has successfully combined its unique maritime and architectural heritage with some excellent tourist attractions, shopping and entertainment. By far the best way to discover Bristol is to wander the streets and marvel at the medieval, Georgian, Victorian and contemporary architecture. Or take a ferryboat and view the city from the harbour, which gives an entirely different perspective of Bristol.
Bristol is an English city and county and one of the two administrative centres of South West England (the other being Plymouth). From its earliest days, its prosperity has been linked to that of the Port of Bristol, the commercial port which originated in the city centre, but which has now migrated to the Bristol Channel coast. Bristol extends to this coast and includes Avonmouth, where much of the current port is located. Notable areas in and surrounding the city include Clifton, Filton and Patchway.
There are two principal railway stations in Bristol: Bristol Parkway and Bristol Temple Meads. Bristol was never well served by suburban railways, though the Severn Beach Line to Avonmouth and Severn Beach survived the Beeching Axe and is still in operation today. The Portishead Railway was closed in the Beeching Axe but was relaid between 2000-2002 as far as the Royal Portbury Dock with a Strategic Rail Authority rail-freight grant. Plans to relay a further three miles of track to Portishead, a largely dormitory town with only one connecting road, have been discussed but have there is currently insufficient funding to rebuild stations.
Long-standing plans for a light rail system in the Bristol area have so far come to nothing, and as a consequence public transport within the city is still largely bus based. The majority of the local bus service is operated by First Bristol. One unusual feature of transport in Bristol are the water based city centre transport routes, operated as the Bristol Ferry Boat, which provide both leisure and commuter services on the harbour.
The city is connected by road on an east-west axis from London to Wales by the M4 motorway, and on a north-southwest axis from Birmingham to Exeter by the M5 motorway. The M32 motorway is a spur from the M4 to the city centre.
The city is also served by its own airport (BRS), at Lulsgate, which has recently seen substantial improvements to its runway, terminal and other facilities.Despite being hilly, Bristol is one of the prominent cycling cities of England, and is home to the national cycle campaigning group Sustrans. It has a number of urban cycle routes, as well as links to National Cycle Network routes to Bath and London, to Gloucester and Wales, and to the South-Western peninsula of England.