Landore

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Landore
Welsh: Glandŵr
Liberty stadium swansea.jpg
Liberty stadium in Landore
Landore is located in Swansea
Landore
Landore
 Landore shown within Swansea
OS grid reference SS656957
Principal area Swansea
Ceremonial county West Glamorgan
Country Wales
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town SWANSEA
Postcode district SA1/SA5
Dialling code 01792
Police South Wales
Fire Mid and West Wales
Ambulance Welsh
EU Parliament Wales
UK Parliament Swansea East
Welsh Assembly Swansea East
List of places
UK
Wales
Swansea

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Landore (Welsh: Glandŵr) is a district of Swansea, Wales, falling in the Landore council ward. A mainly residential area, it is located about 2.5 miles north of Swansea city centre. The north-easterly part of Landore is known as Morfa. There have been a number of new developments in the 21st century, such as the Liberty Stadium and the Morfa Shopping Park, which opened in 2005.

Facilities

A new £1.5m bowls stadium, the Landore Bowls Stadium opened in early 2008 becoming the home of the Swansea Indoor Bowls Club. The venue hosted the World Indoor Singles and Mixed Pairs Championships in April 2008.[1]

First Great Western's Landore Depot is used for servicing Inter City 125 passenger trains. The Landore railway viaduct is a prominent local landmark. Landore once had a railway station, a stop on the South Wales Railway located near the Swansea Loop East Junction.[2][3]

Landore has a park and ride with 550 spaces. The associated bus service, which is operated by First Cymru as route 501,[4] uses a bus lane to the railway station.[5]

Industrial heritage

The first copper works in the Swansea area was opened in Landore in 1717,[6] and in the 1860s Carl Wilhelm Siemens perfected the open hearth furnace at a local works.[6] By 1873 the area had one of the world's largest steelworks,[6] and industrial pollution in Landore inspired the doggerel it came to pass in days of yore / the Devil chanced upon Landore. / Quoth he:"by all this fume and stink / I can't be far from home, I think."[6] Landore has a number of listed buildings from its industrial past. There is a campaign to make the remaining historical buildings in the Lower Swansea valley, including Landore, a World Heritage Site.[7]

Grade II listed buildings include:[8]

  • Pier to former Waste Tip Tramroad & adjoining boundary wall, Hafod Copper Works off Neath Road
  • Copper Slag Abutment to former Waste Tip Tramroad, Hafod Copper Works off Neath Road
  • Hafod Lime Kiln, off Neath Road
  • Canteen Building, at former Yorkshire Imperial Metal Works on Neath Road
  • Morfa Bridge, off Normandy Road
  • Morfa Quay, off Normandy Road
  • Laboratory Building at entrance of former Yorkshire Imperial Metal Works on Neath Road
  • Vivian Works Engine House at former Yorkshire Imperial Metal Works on Neath Road
  • Chimney west of Vivian Works Engine House at former Yorkshire Imperial Metal Works on Neath Road
  • Casey's Roofing Centre, formerly Landore Cinema on Neath Road
  • Old Siloh Chapel (English) & Sunday School on Siloh Road
  • New Siloh (Congregational) Chapel & School House on Siloh Road
  • Museum Stores, formerly Morfa Copperworks
  • Former Hafod Copper Works, River Quay
  • Former Vivian Locomotive Shed
  • Boundary Wall at former Hafod Copper Works

Grade II* listed buildings:[8]

  • Mushgrove Engine House & adjacent Chimney Stack, at former Yorkshire Imperial Metal Works, Neath Road

See also

References

External links