1
Grade II* listed Tabernacle, Cardiff
The inscriptions in black at the top of the church in The Hayes show that it was built in 1821, rebuilt in 1865. The name in the inscription is the English spelling Tabernacle, but the blue name boards at street level show the Welsh spelling Tabernacl. Tabernacl is the only Welsh language Baptist church in Cardiff. The building was Grade II* listed in May 1975.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 30 Dec 2012
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2
Ordnance Survey Cut Mark
This OS cut mark can be found on the NE face of the Duke of Wellington. It marks a point 10.522m above mean sea level.
Image: © Adrian Dust
Taken: 1 Oct 2017
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3
Cardiff: The Hayes on a wet night
The Hayes, one of Cardiff's principal shopping streets, is pedestrianised and we look along it from its southern end in a horrid drizzle and high winds.
Image: © Chris Downer
Taken: 19 Feb 2016
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4
Arthur's watering hole
Some prestigious and lavish brick architecture in the Hayes, proving how much the licensing trade was regarded in centuries past.
Image: © Neil Owen
Taken: 16 Jul 2014
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5
Duke of Wellington, Cardiff
City centre pub at 42 The Hayes, on the corner of Caroline Street.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 30 Dec 2012
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6
A second pair of eyes
Not content with Big Brother watching your movements, someone else will have an eye open for anything tasty that you might have about you.
Image: © Neil Owen
Taken: 16 Jul 2014
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7
The Hayes, Cardiff
Image: © John Lord
Taken: 3 Mar 2015
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8
Tabernacle Chapel, Cardiff
Also shown at http://www.geograph.org.uk/search.php?i=85496968 , the grade II* listed chapel is described at http://cadwpublic-api.azurewebsites.net/reports/listedbuilding/FullReport?lang=en&id=13722 . "Ambitious chapel in Italianate style, with particularly fine interior, by one of best of mid C19 chapel architects in Cardiff".
Image: © Derek Harper
Taken: 16 Jun 2018
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9
Alliance sculpture, Cardiff
Do the coloured sections move with the tides?
Wikipedia says "Alliance's arrow and hoop seem to balance in the air. The hoop, filled with a phosphorescent liquid, is partially submerged below the pavement, with a mechanism programmed to make it rise and fall with the Bristol Channel tides." We didn't have time to watch.
More about it here; http://www.jbmetais.com/index.php?act=article&id=39
Image: © Chris Morgan
Taken: 17 Jul 2021
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10
Caroline Street, Cardiff
Viewed from St Mary Street looking towards The Hayes.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 30 Dec 2012
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