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The Ivy Asia is a restaurant coming under the Ivy Restaurant group, offering Asian-inspired food and drink. [15] The original Ivy Asia restaurant launched in May 2021 in the Ivy Manchester Spinningfields branch. [16] Multiple branches have opened across the UK since, including Cardiff, Brighton, London (Chelsea, Mayfair and St Paul's) and Leeds ...
Techniquest is a science discovery centre located in Cardiff Bay, Wales. [1] It gives visitors a hands-on approach to science and includes a science theatre, a planetarium, and an exhibition space with over 100 interactive exhibits aimed at visitors of all ages.
St Mary Street (Welsh: Heol Eglwys Fair) and High Street (Welsh: Heol Fawr) are major commercial streets in the Castle Quarter of Cardiff city centre, Wales, which form a major thoroughfare running south from the gatehouse of Cardiff Castle.
$1.39 at amazon.com. Whole Flax Seed. Vegans know all about “flax egg.” But for the unfamiliar, you can turn these seeds into a thickener used for baking in the same way you’d use an actual egg.
B. William Lawrence Balls; Charles Alfred Barber; Charles Barter; Richard Bateman (botanist) David Baulcombe; William Jackson Bean; Danny Beath; Richard Henry Beddome
The complex features restaurants, cafés, a Hollywood Bowl bowling alley with arcade amusements, an Odeon multiplex cinema, a casino, gym and an on-site car park. It is located in the Cardiff Bay area, opposite the Wales Millennium Centre. This is close to the A4232 and near Cardiff Bay railway station.
Pontcanna (Welsh for 'pont bridge + Canna') is an inner-city district and community in the west of Cardiff, Wales.It is located adjecent to Canton, Cardiff.It is also located a short distance to the city centre, and its borders are approximately indicated by Western Avenue, the River Taff, Cowbridge Road East and Llandaff Road.
View from over the Great Glasshouse at the National Botanic Garden of Wales, towards Paxton's Tower The Great Glasshouse at National Botanic Garden of Wales. In 1978, interest had been captured by local walkers, who were keen to revive the splendour of what they could see around them.