Membury services
Membury services is a motorway service station on the M4 motorway, located on the original site of RAF Membury in the civil parish of Lambourn in the English county of Berkshire, close to the boundary with Wiltshire, west of Junction 14. It is owned by Welcome Break and is situated adjacent to the Membury Radio Mast.
History
The service area was built by Ross Group, after Leicester Forest East, with Hartshead Moor services.Construction
The services were built by Monk. Planning consent had been given in July 1970.Food
It was designed by Howard V Lobb, to have three restaurants:- truckers, 80 seats
- general self-service cafeteria area, 180 seats
- grill room, with waitress service, 120 seats
Opening
On 22 December 1971, a stretch of the M4 was opened between Badbury, Wiltshire near Swindon, and the Holyport Interchange on the A423; it was opened at 11 am by Michael Heseltine, and his daughter Alexandria, at the Holyport Interchange. The M4 section was the longest stretch of motorway to be opened in England, since the M1 in 1959. The service area is on the Theale to Shefford Woodlands section, which is ; the route was announced in December 1966, but altered in November 1967 after objections. The only services on the M4 in December 1971 were at Heston and Aust; Membury opened in February 1972; more service areas had been planned, but never built. The Winnersh Interchange, with the A329, opened in early 1973.
Buildings
Shell would run the pumps.Planned services on the M4
Other M4 service areas were planned at Warren Copse near Shurlock Row and Waltham St Lawrence, Furze Hill, and Ashes Copse near Bradfield, Berkshire; in June 1972, Berkshire County Council looked at Upper Wood Farm on Cutbush Lane in Earley, owned by the University of Reading.Facilities
Membury is one of five services which have a Starbucks drive-thru: the others are Fleet M3, Warwick M40, Hartshead Moor M62 and Gordano M5.The service station is one of fourteen for which large murals were commissioned from artist David Fisher in the 1990s, designed to reflect the local area and history.
The services were constructed along with this section of the M4 from 1969 to 1971 by Arthur Monk and Co Ltd.
The Iron Age hillfort, Membury Camp, lies to the immediate southwest of the old airfield and the services.