Gower Heritage Centre

LOCATION

PARKMILL, SWANSEA

Recommended by
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Our View

Based around a 12th-century water-powered cornmill, the site also contains a number of craft workshops, two play areas, animals, a museum and a miller's cottage, all set in attractive countryside in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Upcoming events include Pirate Weeks (in Feb and July), Cheese & Cider Weekend (in May), Gower Good Food Festival (May-June), Ukelele Festival of Wales (June) and plenty more. See the website for details.

Gower Heritage Centre
Y Felin Ddwr,PARKMILL,Swansea,SA3 2EH

Features

Children
  • Suitable for children of all ages
Facilities
  • Parking onsite
  • Parking nearby
  • Cafe
Accessibility
  • Facilities: Ramp entrance access, amplification system guided tours
  • Accessible toilets
Opening times
  • Open all year
  • Opening Times: Open all year daily, 10-5. Closed 25-26 Dec, 1 Jan (closing times vary winter)

About the area

Discover Swansea

There’s no getting away from it – when it comes to image, Swansea is a bit of a mixed bag. During its heyday in the 19th century, as king of the copper industry, it was known as ‘Copperopolis’. Dylan Thomas then called it an ‘ugly, lovely town’, but home-grown megastar Catherine Zeta-Jones raves about it and surveys have concluded it’s the best place to live in Britain. The good news is that regeneration is afoot. The dock area has been redeveloped into an opulent Maritime Quarter, where refurbished old buildings mingle with modern architecture, and the city is home to some appealing attractions.

When you tire of the city, head west along the Gower Peninsula, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The perfect holiday destination, it is the ideal place to surf, kite surf or boogie board, with stunning beaches and pretty inland areas. There are four National Nature Reserves and ample gardens, parks, cycle-paths and bridleways. Inland Gower is mostly heath and grazing farmland broken up into tiny parcels of fields, but it has its fair share of attractions, with a smattering of little villages, such as Reynoldston, situated on the Cefn Bryn ridge from where there are far-reaching views of the peninsula.

 

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