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Caroline Street. Caroline Street (Welsh: Stryd Caroline) is a pedestrianised street running east–west in the lower part of Cardiff city centre, located between The Hayes and St. Mary's Street. Due to the density of fast food shops along the street, it is colloquially referred to as Chip Alley, or Chippy Lane.
City Road, Cardiff. / 51.489; -3.168. City Road ( Welsh: Heol y Plwca) runs through the Plasnewydd area of Cardiff, Wales. Designated as the B4261, it runs roughly 1 km (0.6 mi) south-southeasterly from the junction of Crwys Road ( A469) and Albany Road (known as "Death Junction"), to Newport Road ( A4161 ). It is mostly lined with small shops ...
Womanby Street. / 51.4804611°N 3.1815500°W / 51.4804611; -3.1815500. Womanby Street is one of the oldest streets in Cardiff, the capital of Wales. [1] Tracing its name back to origins within the Norse language, its original purpose was to link Cardiff Castle to its quay.
Cardiff. The Cardiff Top Rank Suite opened in 1963 on Queen Street in the centre of the city. It hosted acts such as The Beatles, Led Zeppelin and U2. The Top Rank closed in 1982 but the venue continued under a series of names until the building was demolished in 2005. [2] They held a few Battle of the Bands, there as well.
Cardiff city centre (Welsh: Canol Dinas Caerdydd) is the city centre and central business district of Cardiff, Wales. The area is tightly bound by the River Taff to the west, the Civic Centre to the north and railway lines and two railway stations – Central and Queen Street – to the south and east respectively. Cardiff became a city in 1905.
Lloyd George Avenue, Atlantic Wharf (Cardiff Bay) St. Mary Street, city centre. The Hayes, city centre. West Grove, Roath. Caroline Street - 'Chip Alley'/'Chippy Lane' (2010) St Mary Street, northern end (2009) St Mary Street, southern end (2007) The Hayes before redevelopment (2006) The Hayes and St Davids 2 (2010)
The Vulcan Hotel is a historic hotel and public house, that was located in Adamsdown suburb of Cardiff, South Wales.Scheduled for demolition in 2009, after a long public campaign to preserve what had become one of Cardiff's oldest working public houses, in 2012 it was donated to the National History Museum at St Fagans.
Insole Court (Welsh: Cwrt Insole) is a Grade II* Listed Victorian Gothic mansion in Llandaff, Cardiff, Wales, built for wealthy businessman James Harvey Insole (1821 Worcester - 1901 Llandaff) [4][3] and dating back to 1855. The mansion and Stable Yard are operated by a registered charity, the Insole Court Trust, who began operating the site in ...