Business & Technology
Oxford pub Eagle and Child designs are now on display
The Eagle and Child in St Giles, renowned for its links with fantasy writers JRR Tolkien and CS Lewis, closed in March 2020 and has not reopened since.
Renovation work is taking place and builders have fenced off the parking bays outside the pub.
READ MORE: Renovation work at historic pub well under way
Now the fencing is being used to show passers-by what the historic pub is expected to look like when it reopens in 2027.
How the Eagle and Child could look in 2027 (Image: Ellison Institute of Technology)
Artists’ impressions show how the pub will be modernised, while retaining its links with the past.
New owner, American science company the Ellison Institute of Technology (EIT), has been moving ahead with plans to revamp it, and expects to welcome customers again in 2027.
The technology institute, owned by billionaire Larry Ellison, is reported to have paid $10.7m for the pub – about £8m – when it was sold by St John’s College in 2023.
How the Eagle and Child could look inside (Image: Ellison Institute of Technology)
The institute is working with the company owned by world-famous architect Norman Foster for the redesign of the pub.
The area at the front of the building has been fenced off, with a sign telling pedestrians the pavement will be shut off “from September 2025 until March 2027”, and scaffolding has been erected.
The institute has said previously the pub is expected to reopen next year.
How the Eagle and Child could look inside (Image: Ellison Institute of Technology)
Dave Richardson, a spokesman for the Oxford branch of CAMRA (Campaign for Real Ale) said earlier this year: “I understand there is now quite a lot of work going on, particularly where you can’t see the building from St Giles.
“I hope the pub is on course to reopen on schedule next year. We have missed the pub and I know Tolkien fans have missed it as well.
“From our point of view we would like to see an independent operator hired to run the Eagle and Child.
“The fear is that if a large chain is given the role it will then put its corporate stamp on the place.
“We want to see it thrive and it would be good to see it in independent hands.”
How the Eagle and Child could look inside (Image: The Ellison Institute of Technology)
Working closely with heritage architects Donald Insall Associates, Norman Foster’s practice is employing “a conservation-led” approach to restoring and preserve as much of the original building as possible.
There will be “light-touch” interventions within the pub’s two historic parlour rooms and famous ‘Rabbit Room’, where the Inklings group once met, maintaining a sense of familiarity.
Gerard Evenden, head of studio at Foster and Partners, said earlier: “The design preserves the unique character of The Eagle and Child and respects its many layers of history.
“Our sensitive interventions will create an all-day meeting place by introducing an adjacent café and inspirational workspaces for EIT across the upper levels.
“The scheme is stitched together by a newly landscaped garden and restored passageway between the café and the pub – new social spaces that transition effortlessly from day to night.”
The Ellison Institute of Technology has been contacted for comment.
Business & Technology
Popular hi-fi and vinyl company closes Oxford branch
Established in 1972, Sevenoaks Sound and Vision is one of the largest independent Hi-Fi and Home Cinema retailers in the UK.
The company set up shop in Oxford on Banbury Road, but closed down recently.
Their website describes themselves as “a unique, first-class experience.”
Sevenoaks Sound and Vision invited music fans to experience its new state-of-the-art listening in 2024 (Image: Sevenoaks Sound and Vision)
“All of this is supported by a custom installation service which specialises in the creation and installation of bespoke home entertainment systems to suit all budgets.”
The company still has stores in Bristol, Bromley, Cambridge, Chelsea, Cheltenham, Epsom, Guildford, London, Leeds, Manchester, Norwich, Nottingham, Reading, Tunbridge Wells, Witham, and Yeovil.
They also have their flagship store in Seven Oaks, near Kent, and are opening a new store in Sutton Coldfield, near Birmingham.
Business & Technology
Everpure launches data intelligence for AI projects
Everpure has launched Everpure Data Intelligence, a product aimed at helping companies prepare enterprise data for artificial intelligence use.
The launch is part of a broader push by the storage and data management company to move customers towards what it calls a data-centric architecture, with governance and context applied directly to information at source rather than through separate applications.
Everpure Data Intelligence is the renamed business from 1touch, which Everpure acquired earlier this year. The software is designed to discover, classify and contextualise data across on-premises systems, public clouds, software-as-a-service applications and third-party storage.
It is intended to address a problem many businesses say is slowing AI projects: fragmented data spread across multiple systems, with inconsistent controls and limited visibility. Everpure cited research from IDC and its own study showing that 45% of businesses are looking to implement a unified data platform to consolidate fragmented data environments for AI work.
Data bottleneck
Everpure said many enterprise IT estates still rely on application-led structures, where data and its meaning remain tied to separate business systems such as finance, logistics or sales. It argues that this model leads to duplication, operational blind spots and a lack of trusted information for AI systems.
The new offering has three main functions: universal discovery across structured and unstructured data, automated governance to identify sensitive information and track lineage, and what Everpure describes as AI-ready context through a semantic knowledge graph that links raw data to business definitions.
Charles Giancarlo, Chairman and CEO of Everpure, outlined the company’s position on that shift. “AI completely upends the traditional IT hierarchy; enterprises that do not shift from app-centricity to data primacy will fall behind,” said Giancarlo. “Because data is a company’s primary asset, embedding context, semantics and governance directly at the data layer is the right way to reduce data fragmentation created by the growth of apps and AI agents. Enterprises need to consolidate their fragmented enterprise data footprint into a real-time corpus of trusted intelligence.”
The software is available now. It works across data stored on the Everpure platform as well as external environments, reflecting the reality that many large businesses operate mixed estates rather than a single infrastructure stack.
Cloud and control
Alongside the launch, Everpure announced updates to its Enterprise Data Cloud architecture. These include changes to its Unified Data Plane and Intelligent Control Plane, intended to create a shared operating foundation across infrastructure and automate routine storage administration tasks.
One element is Evergreen//One Overdrive, a service due in the third quarter that is designed to provide temporary performance increases for on-premises storage during demand spikes of up to 25% above baseline, without requiring a permanent subscription change.
Other planned additions include workload rebalancing and mobility tools, natural-language workflow execution for storage administrators, enhanced cyber anomaly detection based on telemetry across the wider environment, and compliance monitoring intended to identify configuration drift.
Industry analysts have increasingly focused on data quality and governance as barriers to AI deployment, even as spending on chips and models continues to dominate headlines. Matt Kimball, VP and Principal Analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy, said many businesses are investing heavily in AI systems without resolving the underlying data issues.
“Enterprises are spending millions on advanced AI models and compute, but their underlying infrastructure is starving those systems with disconnected data,” said Kimball. “The biggest bottleneck to AI adoption right now isn’t the software, it’s the plumbing. Putting data at the absolute center of the enterprise strategy is exactly how IT leaders can rein in runaway operational costs and accelerate rollouts.”
Wider strategy
The announcement also reflects a wider effort by Everpure to move beyond storage hardware and position itself more firmly around data management, governance and automation. By embedding data discovery and policy controls into infrastructure workflows, the company is seeking to present a more integrated alternative to point tools used for classification, compliance and operational oversight.
For customers, the practical test will be whether the software can reduce the manual work involved in finding business-critical data, applying controls to sensitive records and making information usable for AI tools without broad replication across systems. Those issues have become more pressing as companies experiment with AI agents that need access to current, reliable enterprise data.
Everpure said the wider architecture is intended to show where data sits, how it connects and what it means across the estate, with governance rules attached to the data itself rather than enforced only through the application layer.
Business & Technology
Bicester dealership makes the case for a UK touring holiday
The family-run business, part of the L C Hughes Partnership, has spent the past few years quietly building itself into one of the larger caravan centres in the south of England, and the timing looks shrewd.
With the pound’s purchasing power abroad still feeling pinched, airport queues a regular feature of the summer news cycle and a generation of younger families rediscovering the appeal of the Lake District, Pembrokeshire and the north Norfolk coast, demand for touring holidays in Britain has held up well.
The site itself is set up to take advantage of that.
Bicester Caravan and Leisure is a main dealer for Swift, Sprite, Elddis, Xplore, Buccaneer and Coachman, which is a fairly comprehensive sweep of the British caravan market in one car park.
The new caravan stock list takes in family-friendly Sprite layouts, the lighter Basecamp range aimed at couples and weekenders, and the more luxurious Elegance Grande and Coachman Lusso models at the top end.
For anyone not ready to commit to a full caravan, the dealership has also become the exclusive UK importer of Comanche folding campers and trailer tents, a Spanish brand with more than two decades of trailer-building behind it.
The Camp-let range, designed for families of four and expandable to sleep up to eight, offers another route in at a lower price point, and the recently announced Cabanon trailer tents add a further option for buyers who want canvas rather than fibreglass.
Tents and folding campers tend to attract first-time buyers, and staff at the dealership are themselves keen caravanners, which makes the showroom feel less like a car forecourt and more like a specialist outdoors shop.
The practical side of caravan ownership is handled on the same site.
An NCC approved workshop takes care of servicing, habitation checks and warranty work across all the major brands, and a fully stocked accessory shop sells everything from motor movers to awnings.
Secure on-site storage is available for owners who would rather not park a caravan on the drive, and the Bicester Bean cafe gives browsers somewhere to sit down with a coffee between viewings.
A campsite of the dealership’s own is also under construction, which should give new buyers a soft landing for their first night under canvas or in a brand-new van.
None of this would matter much if the wider picture for UK touring was flat, but it is not.
Caravan and motorhome sites across Oxfordshire, the Cotswolds and the south west have been reporting strong forward bookings, and the appeal of being able to set off on a Friday evening without a passport check is hard to argue with.
For anyone in the Oxford area weighing up whether this is the year to take the plunge, the Bicester site is a sensible first stop.
More information about the current stock, the workshop and the Comanche and Cabanon ranges is available on the Bicester Caravan and Leisure website.
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