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City Hall (Welsh: Neuadd y ddinas) is a municipal building in Cardiff, Wales, UK. It serves as Cardiff's centre of local government. It was built as part of the Cathays Park civic centre development and opened in October 1906. Built of Portland stone, it is an important early example of the Edwardian Baroque style. It is a Grade I listed ...
Date and time of data generation: 13:58, 13 January 2016: Orientation: Normal: Software used: Windows Photo Editor 10.0.10011.16384: File change date and time
John Speed's 1610 map of Cardiff. Cardiff was granted city status by Edward VII in 1905. [4] In the 1960s, planners described Cardiff city centre as "worn out, inconvenient, drab and dangerous". The centre had escaped the extensive wartime bomb damage inflicted on other cities, so little redevelopment took place in the 1950s and 1960s.
CITY GUIDES: The unsung capital of Wales is often overlooked en route to the coast or mountains, but with its big-hitter galleries and inventive food scene, Caerdydd deserves to be feted with all ...
Philip Halling / City Hall, Cardiff. Philip Halling / City Hall, Cardiff: Camera location View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMap: Object location ...
Callaghan Square, city centre, previously known as Bute Square. Central Square, city centre, included the bus station between 1954 and 2015. Loudoun Square, Butetown; Mount Stuart Square, Butetown; Roald Dahl Plass, Cardiff Bay.
Tŷ William Morgan (Welsh for William Morgan House) is a UK Government building and hub in the centre of the city of Cardiff, Wales.It primarily serves as a base for HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) and also houses staff from other UK Government Departments including Wales Office, Department for Business and Trade, Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Ministry of Housing, Communities and ...
John Speed's 1610 map of Cardiff. The town hall is marked 'P'. The gild hall was replaced by the second town hall in the 1330s. This structure, sometimes called the town house, was built on land allocated by a charter of 1331, was located in the centre of what is now St Mary Street (at ), a site that Cardiff's town hall would occupy for the next 500