The area is mostly residential with two main shopping areas. The main road at the hub of the village, Red Bank Road, houses a number of high street stores such as
Sainsbury's supermarket. The main shopping area in Bispham is split into two distinct parts. Firstly, from the top of Red Bank Road at the junction with
Queens Promenade, running halfway down Red Bank Road toward Bispham
fire station. This area contains a mixture of local and tourist businesses including a relatively large number of restaurants, as well as a number of
takeaways and
designer wear shops. The other shopping area is based around what is known locally as "the village" which is the area beyond Devonshire Road roundabout behind Bispham
Police Station, where the shops are sited around a large outdoor car park. The village area also contains the handful of original cottages remaining in Bispham. There are also small shopping areas on Ashfield Road, Moor Park Avenue and Bispham Road.
Religion There are two
Church of England Parish churches—
Bispham Parish Church, All Hallows Road, and Greenlands St. Anne church, Salmesbury Avenue and one Catholic Parish Church, St. Bernadette's church, on Devonshire Road. Other churches include The Gate Community Church, Bispham United Reformed Church, Springfield Greenlands Methodist Church, and Cavendish Road Congregational Church. An additional Methodist Church on Beaufort Avenue closed in 2017.
Bispham Parish Church has an original Norman doorway Greenlands, St Anne has an active healing ministry. Keajra Kadampa Buddhist Centre, a residential
Buddhist centre and a member of the
New Kadampa Tradition is located on Holmfield Road.
Education The village has several schools, including Primary schools • Bispham Endowed Church of England Primary School, located on Bispham Road. The original school was housed in what is now the home of the local
Sea Cadets near to Devonshire Road roundabout. The school is connected to Bispham Parish Church, and the first school was founded in 1659. In 2007 the school was listed in the top 100 most improved schools in England. • Langdale Independent Preparatory School • Moor Park Primary School, located on Moor Park Avenue in the Moor Park area of Bispham. • Saint Bernadette's Catholic Primary School • Westcliff Primary School
Secondary schools •
Bispham High School Arts College (formally closed in 2014, demolished in January 2017) •
Montgomery Academy Colleges •
Blackpool and The Fylde College the large main campus of the college is located on Ashfield Road, Bispham.
Local attractions and amenities The village has a few attractions, with the tram station and the highest cliffs on both The
Fylde Coast and the North West Coast. There are a number of hotels and guest houses mostly around the seaward end of Red Bank Road and on Queens Promenade. The Red Lion pub also houses a
Premier Inn. Bispham has five of the fourteen
Lancashire County Council designated Biological Heritage Sites (BHS) located in Blackpool, including
Kincraig Lake Ecological Reserve which is located on Kincraig Road, with Kincraig lake and a wild fowl population, from which Kincraig Primary School takes its school crest.
Bispham Rock Gardens is at the top of Knowle Hill on Devonshire Road and runs downhill toward the back of
Bispham High School Arts College (formerly Greenlands High School for Girls), with views from the top toward
Pendle Hill,
Beacon Fell and the
Bowland fells.
North Blackpool Pond Trail beginning at Holyoake Avenue and continuing as far as Moor Park Avenue covers a group of 23 ponds, a reed bed, a
community orchard (on Salmesbury Avenue located at the former 'Higher Moor Farm') and a series of dykes /ditches, most of which are Biological Heritage Sites (important at a county level). A campaign by local residents and environmental groups led to the creation of a series of walks and interpretation boards along with a programme of events and volunteering opportunities though most of these 'walks' existed prior to their involvement and were produced by 'job creation' schemes. There are now significant opportunities for people to access and engage with the natural environment.
Moor Park runs adjoining Moor Park Avenue and Bispham Road. The park contains a children's playground, parkland, a (disused)
bowling green and Moor Park Swimming Pool which is located in the northwest corner of the park. It has a 25-metre pool and a teaching pool. The
Friends of Moor Park group was set up in January 2007 with the aim of restoring the park to its former glory including work on the footpaths through the park and the possibility of re-opening the disused bowling green as well as work on the children's playground. Other parks in Bispham include Cavendish Road Recreation Ground which has tennis courts,
football and basketball areas and a bowling green, which has a Friends group—
Friends of Cavendish Road Recreation Ground. In November 2007 with both funding and planning obtained, work started at Cavendish Road Recreation Ground on a new
Kiddies playground, aimed at children under seven years old; the new park opened in 2008. Red Bank Bowling Green is located next to Sainsbury's and is owned by the adjoining Bispham Conservative Club. The green was originally a garden belonging to the house which is now the Conservative Club. Bispham library was opened on 5 May 1938.
Trinity – the hospice in the Fylde is a specialist
palliative care service for adults and children located on Low Moor Road.
Public houses in Bispham include The Highlands, The Albion, the Red Lion, the Bispham Hotel and the Squirrel Hotel. There are also two wine bars, Xanders in
the village and Maddisons on Red Bank Road. Admiral Point on Queens Promenade is a luxury housing development in a Grade II listed building. It was originally
The Miners Convalescent Home and was built by
Bradshaw Gass & Hope between 1925 and 1927. It was opened by the Prince of Wales on 28 June 1927. The home, which for many years was empty was redeveloped into luxury homes by housebuilders Persimmon Homes and is now known as Admiral Point, with 47 apartments, together with 112 apartments and homes around the grounds, with two new six-storey apartment blocks built flanking the main building, and housing behind it. In February 2006 it was revealed that sales of apartments in, what the company described as "the jewel in the crown" at Admiral Point had helped Persimmon Homes to record profits, such was the popularity of the new properties in the Grade II listed building. In October 2005 it was revealed that several high-profile
footballers, including former
Premiership player
Robbie Fowler as well as
Jonathan Macken,
Mads Timm and former player
Lee Sharpe had bought apartments at Admiral Point. On 27 July 2007 Blackpool Council announced that the sports car production would begin within a matter of weeks, initially at part of the former TVR factory; with the company eventually moving to a purpose built factory which had already been leased from the council by William Riley. Bispham Technology Park is a growing, modern, Office and Retail Park which is due to be expanded further in 2008 with the creation of Kincraig Business Park on a site within the park together with an environmental project with green space area to protect wildlife including a pond. On 11 January 2008, local MP,
Joan Humble cut the first sod at a ceremony at the new Kincraig Business Park with the first of forty plots being created at the new park having already been taken even before building work started.
Layton railway station was originally named Bispham railway station. an open space which is owned by Blackpool Council with football pitches, a community centre, secure grazing area and with part of the land sublet to Blackpool
Rugby union football club and a Golf Driving range. In 2007 local residents called for a covenant to be placed on the Gala fields to safeguard the land to be used for future galas. Some of the tableaux have sound and visual content that can only be viewed and heard by walking by them. The tableaux also includes mixed media in the various large tableaux displays. The displays at the cliffs from North Shore to Bispham contain forty large tableaux holding more than 5,000 square metres in surface area. There is a pedestrian walkway running the length of the tableaux displays which are set back from the Promenade beyond the tramway.
Blackpool Tramway runs along the entire length of the Illuminations and there are over one million lamps in the display. In 2007 the Egyptian tableau which includes Egyptian
sarcophagus, which eerily opens to reveal a mummified secret, returned after an overhaul. Also at Bispham on the clifftop was a new BBC Portal video screen. In January 2008 new plans were revealed to erect two new all year round,
triumphal arches at either end of the Illuminations, "selling the Blackpool message". == Transport ==