Cathays Park | |
Photo Width: | 300px |
Type: | Civic centre |
Location: | Cardiff, Wales |
Coords: | 51.4866°N -3.1804°W |
Created: | Early 20th century buildings |
Cathays Park (Welsh: Parc Cathays) or Cardiff Civic Centre[1] is a civic centre area in the city centre of Cardiff, the capital city of Wales, consisting of a number of early 20th century buildings and a central park area, Alexandra Gardens. It includes Edwardian buildings such as the Temple of Peace, City Hall, the National Museum and Gallery of Wales and several buildings belonging to the Cardiff University campus. It also includes Cardiff Crown Court, the administrative headquarters of the Welsh Government, and the more modern Cardiff Central police station. The Pevsner architectural guide to the historic county of Glamorgan judges Cathays Park to be "the finest civic centre in the British Isles".[2] The area falls within the Cathays electoral ward and forms part of the Cathays Park Conservation Area, which was designated in 1975.[3]
Cathays Park was formerly part of Cardiff Castle grounds. The present day character of the area owes much to successive holders of the title the Marquess of Bute, and especially the 3rd Marquess of Bute, an extremely wealthy landowner, and to his gardener, Andrew Pettigrew.[4] The Butes acquired much of the lands in Cathays through investment and by inheritance through a marriage to Charlotte Windsor in 1766.
The idea of acquiring the Cathays House park as an open public space was raised in 1858 and again in 1875. In 1887 it was suggested the park could commemorate Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee. Negotiations did not begin until 1892, when Lord Bute agreed to sell 38 acres for £120,000 (equivalent to £ in). The idea of relocating the Town Hall to the park was controversial, but it was also proposed to locate a new University College building there.
On 14 December 1898, the local council bought the entire 59acres of land for £161,000 from the Marquess of Bute (equivalent to £ in). As part of the sale, the 3rd Marquis of Bute placed strict conditions on how the land was to be developed. The area was to be used for civic, cultural and educational purposes, and the avenues were to be preserved.
A six-month Cardiff Fine Arts, Industrial and Maritime Exhibition which included specially constructed boating lake, a wooden cycling track and an electric railway was held in 1896.[5]
In 1897 a competition was held for a complex comprising Law Courts and a Town Hall, with Alfred Waterhouse, architect of the Natural History Museum in London, as judge. The winners were the firm of Lanchester, Stewart and Rickards,[6] who would later go on to design the Methodist Central Hall in Westminster. These were the first two buildings of the ensemble, and have an almost uniform façade treatment. The east and west pavilions of both façades are identical in design, except for the attic storeys, which are decorated with allegorical sculptural groups. On the Crown Court these are Science and Industry, sculpted by Donald McGill, and Commerce and Industry, by Paul Raphael Montford, while on the City Hall are Music and Poetry by Paul Montford and Unity and Patriotism by Henry Poole.
The third site in this complex went empty until 1910, when the competition for a National Museum of Wales was won by the architects Arnold Dunbar Smith and Cecil Brewer. The design parts from the Edwardian Baroque of the Law Courts and City Hall and is more akin to American Beaux-Arts architecture, particularly in the entrance hall where a similarity to McKim, Mead and White's later Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City has been noted. The Museum site was not bounded to the north by an avenue so there were scarcely any limits on the depth of the building; the 1910 plan was almost twice as deep as it was broad. The First World War, however, ensured that progress on the building was very slow. By 1927 part of the East range, with the lecture theatre funded by William Reardon Smith, was complete. Further extensions came only in the 1960s and 1990s; these remained faithful to the original design on the exterior (and included sculpture by Dhruva Mistry) but are of a neutral character on the inside.
Due to presence of the then Welsh Office building, by the 1990s 'Cathays Park' became used by some as a metonym for that Government Department,[7] [8] [9] [10] and after devolution in 1999, for the Welsh Government's civil servants and ministerial offices.[11] [12]
Status | Criteria | |
---|---|---|
I | Grade I listed. Building of exceptional interest, sometimes considered to be internationally important | |
II* | Grade II* listed. Particularly important building of more than special interest | |
II | Grade II listed. Building of national importance and special interest |
Buildings and structures | Listed building status | Architect | Year opened | Image | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aberdare Hall | 1895 | ||||
Sir Martin Evans Building and Tower Building | / Percy Thomas Partnership | 1968 | |||
Black Box | 1966[13] (demolished 1992) | ||||
Bute Building | and Ivor Jones | 1916 | |||
Cardiff Central Police Station | 1968 | ||||
Cardiff Crown Court | Lanchester, Stewart and Rickards | 1906 | |||
Law Building | Percy Thomas Partnership | 1963 | |||
Cardiff University main building | 1905 | ||||
City Hall | Lanchester, Stewart and Rickards | 1906 | |||
Cathays Park 1 (part of the Crown Buildings complex) | 1938 | ||||
Cathays Park 2 (part of the Crown Buildings complex) | 1979 | ||||
Glamorgan Building (former Glamorgan County Council building) | and Thomas Anderson Moodie | 1912 | |||
Hut in Gorsedd Gardens | Not known | Not known | |||
National Museum and Gallery of Wales | and Cecil Brewer | 1927 | |||
Public conveniences on Museum Avenue | Cardiff City Council's architect’s department | Early 1930s | |||
Redwood Building (Welsh School of Pharmacy) | 1961 | ||||
Temple of Peace | 1938 | ||||
University of Wales, Registry | 1904 (Enlarged 1933 by T Alwyn Lloyd) | ||||
Welsh National War Memorial | 1928 | ||||
Cathays Park gardens | |||||||||||||
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In addition to the large lawn in front of the City Hall, Cathays Park includes three formal gardens and a tree lined park. Main phases of construction of the gardens were from 1903 to 1906 and from 1924 to 1928. The gardens are grade II on the Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales. All of the spaces are within conservation areas and many of the surrounding buildings are listed. The open spaces are very important to the image of the city. Several important buildings overlook these well kept spaces. Each of the three gardens has its own very different character and each retains its original layout. The later 20th and 21st centuries have seen the erection of a large number of memorials in the park which have generated some criticism; John B. Hilling, in his study Black Gold, White City: The History and Architecture of Cardiff Civic Centre published in 2016, attacked the "ill-considered and uncoordinated way [the monuments are] scattered across the gardens".[15]
Named after Alexandra of Denmark, the queen consort of Edward VII. The gardens were first called University Gardens, and were laid out and planted in 1903. Alexandra Gardens is 5acres garden located at the heart of the civic centre. It consists of maintained flower beds and grass, with the Welsh National War Memorial standing at its centre. Alexandra Gardens has been protected since September 2019 as a Centenary Fields, which is a Fields in Trust scheme together with the Royal British Legion, which protects green spaces containing a war memorial that honours the memory of those that lost their lives in World War I.[16] [17]
The garden was originally known as Druidical Gardens, but the name Gorsedd Gardens was later adopted. The 2acres garden has as its centrepiece a stone circle constructed in 1899, when the National Eisteddfod of Wales was held in Cardiff. The stones were originally erected elsewhere in Cathays Park for the National Eisteddfod of 1899. They were re-erected in the garden in 1905. The garden's name refers to the Gorsedd of Welsh Bards, the ceremonial order that governs the Eisteddfod. Work on the landscaped gardens began in 1904 and opened to the public in 1910. It is laid out with lawns, and tree and shrub borders and hedges. The gardens has statues of subjects including David Lloyd George and Lord Ninian Crichton-Stuart.
The Gorsedd Gardens also contain a "tree of life" planted on World AIDS Day, 1 December 1994, to commemorate "all those who have lost their lives to AIDS in Wales".[18] [19] [20] The original plaque was replaced at the 2021 World AIDS Day commemoration event.[18] The tree is the focus for yearly World AIDS Day commemorations, with people attaching red ribbons to the tree.[18] [21] The tree was also the location of Cardiff's vigil after the murder of Brianna Ghey in February 2022.[22]
The 1acres garden is a style of formal garden formerly known as a Dutch Garden. It was begun in 1904 and completed in 1906. It contains a statue constructed in honour of the 3rd Marquess of Bute by James Pittendrigh Macgillivray and erected in 1928.
Queen Anne Square is a tree-lined grass park, which was built in the 1930s and 1950s. It was designed to be aligned with the main thoroughfare of King Edward VII Avenue, on a site that was originally planned for a Welsh Parliament House.[23] The square is enclosed by a tree-lined no through road, by Corbett Road to the south and by Aberdare Hall to the south east.
Name | Sculptor | Date | Listed statues status | Image | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Statue of Third Marquess of Bute | |||||
Statue of John Cory | 1906 | ||||
Statue of Lord Aberdare | 1898 | ||||
Statue of Lord Ninian Edward Crichton Stuart | 1917 | ||||
Statue of David Lloyd George | Michael Rizzello | 1960 | |||
Statue of Godfrey, First Viscount Tredegar | 1909 | ||||
Statue of Judge Gwilym Williams of Miskin | |||||
South African War Memorial also known as the Boer War Memorial | 1909 | ||||
Statue of Girl in Gorsedd Gardens | Robert Thomas | 2005 | |||
Three Obliques (Walk In) Sculpture in forecourt of Department of Music, Cardiff University | Dame Barbara Hepworth | 1968 | |||
Relief Sculpture on Redwood Building | Edward Bainbridge Copnall | 1961 | |||
Official listed name | Listing status | Image | |
---|---|---|---|
University of Wales, Cardiff, including Forecourt Walls | |||
Colonnade and gateways at south end of Queen Anne Square | |||
Pair of Obelisk Lamp Stands to west of City Hall Pair of Obelisk Lamp Stands to south west of City Hall Pair of Obelisk Lamp Stands to south east of City Hall | |||