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Palace Theatre; Plantasia; Patti Pavilion; Sea View Community Primary School; Swansea Central Library (Grade II listed) Swansea Central police station (Grade II listed) Swansea Market; Swansea observatory; Tabernacle Chapel, Morriston (Grade I listed) Vetch Field; Whiteford Lighthouse (Grade II listed) Mumbles Pier
High Street in 1915. In April 2014 Swansea Council made £75,000 available to the owners to carry out work on the High Street theatre, [10] which had been named as one of the 10 most endangered Victorian and Edwardian buildings in England and Wales. The Victorian Society called it "a victim of urban decay". The council funds were earmarked for ...
Dylan Thomas Theatre (144) Grand Theatre. Main Theatre (1,000) Archived 4 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine; Arts Wing (175) Great Hall, Swansea University (700) Patti Pavilion (900) Penyrheol Theatre (500) Taliesin Arts Centre (330) Official Site; YMCA Theatre
Wales and West Utilities have reassured people they are carrying out rigorous checks to make sure the area is safe.
Swansea city centre in Swansea, Wales, contains the main shopping, leisure and nightlife district in Swansea.The city centre covers much of the Castle ward including the area around Oxford Street, Castle Square, and the Quadrant Shopping Centre; Alexandra Road, High Street, Wind Street and the Castle; Parc Tawe; and the Maritime Quarter extending down to the seafront.
Temple street, Swansea, showing the bank, theatre and post office (1865) Docks and railway bridge (1850) A romanticised depiction of early copper smelting works in the Lower Swansea Valley c. 1800. From the early 1700s to the late 1800s, Swansea was the world's leading copper-smelting area. [21]
Kilauea, one of the world's most active volcanoes, began erupting around 2:30 a.m. local time, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
In 1968, the Swansea Grand was threatened with closure but, following a campaign led by its manager and artistic director John Chilvers, the theatre was saved. [2] The Swansea Corporation (City Council) leased the building in May 1969 and bought it outright in 1979. The theatre was then refurbished and updated between 1983 and 1987 at a cost of ...