Difference between revisions of "Old Colwyn"

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It hosted the National Eisteddfod in 1941.
 
It hosted the National Eisteddfod in 1941.
  
Old Colwyn was once overlooked by the Hotel 70 Degrees, (just above Tan-y-Lan) so named because the architect who designed it used 70 degree angles in its construction.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/northwest/sites/colwyn/pages/hotel70.shtml BBC News - Hotel 70 Degrees]</ref> Built in 1972, it was demolished in 2007, to be replaced by a housing development. It also has easy access onto the promenade and beach, as well as a protruded cliff area known as Penmaenhead, marked by a disused stone utility house. This is a popular spot amongst teenagers for the dangerous practice of "cliff jumping" when tide is in and the water is deep enough, though to date nobody has been reported injuried.
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Old Colwyn was once overlooked by the Hotel 70 Degrees, (just above Tan-y-Lan) so named because the architect who designed it used 70 degree angles in its construction.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/northwest/sites/colwyn/pages/hotel70.shtml BBC News - Hotel 70 Degrees]</ref> Built in 1972, it was demolished in 2007, to be replaced by a housing development. It also has easy access onto the promenade and beach, as well as a protruded cliff area known as Penmaenhead, marked by a disused stone utility house. This is a popular spot amongst teenagers for the dangerous practice of "cliff jumping" when tide is in and the water is deep enough, though to date nobody has been reported injured.
  
 
Old Colwyn once had a station on the North Wales Coast Line from [[Chester]] to [[Holyhead]]; the line remains open but the station closed in December 1952. There is still a "Station Road."
 
Old Colwyn once had a station on the North Wales Coast Line from [[Chester]] to [[Holyhead]]; the line remains open but the station closed in December 1952. There is still a "Station Road."

Latest revision as of 14:13, 27 January 2016

Old Colwyn
Welsh: Hen Golwyn
Denbighshire
Old Colwyn in the Afternoon.jpg
Old Colwyn seen from Rhos-on-Sea
Location
Grid reference: SH8678
Location: 53°17’28"N, 3°42’14"W
Data
Population: 7,626  (2001)
Post town: Colwyn Bay
Postcode: LL29
Dialling code: 01492
Local Government
Council: Conwy
Parliamentary
constituency:
Clwyd West

Old Colwyn is a small town just to the east of Colwyn Bay, in Denbighshire, or technically speaking in a detached part of Caernarfonshire locally situate in Denbighshire.

It hosted the National Eisteddfod in 1941.

Old Colwyn was once overlooked by the Hotel 70 Degrees, (just above Tan-y-Lan) so named because the architect who designed it used 70 degree angles in its construction.[1] Built in 1972, it was demolished in 2007, to be replaced by a housing development. It also has easy access onto the promenade and beach, as well as a protruded cliff area known as Penmaenhead, marked by a disused stone utility house. This is a popular spot amongst teenagers for the dangerous practice of "cliff jumping" when tide is in and the water is deep enough, though to date nobody has been reported injured.

Old Colwyn once had a station on the North Wales Coast Line from Chester to Holyhead; the line remains open but the station closed in December 1952. There is still a "Station Road."

The Fairy Glen

In Old Colwyn is an area of woodland called the 'Fairy Glen', a name which dates from the Victorian era and is a common name from that period, attractive to visitors of a romantic disposition, as for example thereis a "Fairy Glen" in Penmaenmawr. This area has recently undergone a regeneration with funding from the council and it is now possible to walk through it easily. The Fairy Glen is subject to an ownership dispute between the local council and the water company, Dŵr Cymru, each claiming that the maintenance of the area is the responsibility of the other.

Sport and Big Society

  • Football: Colwyn Bay Football Club
  • 3rd Colwyn Bay (Old Colwyn) Scout Group

Outside links

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Old Colwyn)

References