Blaenavon

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Blaenavon

Population 6,349
OS grid reference SO255095
Principal area Torfaen
Ceremonial county Gwent
Constituent country Wales
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town PONTYPOOL
Postcode district NP4
Dial code 01495
Police Gwent
Fire South Wales
Ambulance Welsh
UK Parliament Torfaen
European Parliament Wales
List of places: UKWalesTorfaen
Blaenavon Industrial Landscapea
UNESCO World Heritage Site
State Party United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Type Cultural
Criteria iii, iv
Identification #984
Regionb Europe and North America

Inscription History

Formal Inscription: 2000
24th Session

a Name as officially inscribed on the WH List
b As classified officially by UNESCO

Blaenavon (Welsh: Blaenafon) is a town and World Heritage Site in southern Wales, lying at the source of the Afon Llwyd. The town lies high on a hillside and has a population of 6,349 people.

The Big Pit Mining Museum
The Big Pit Mining Museum

Blaenavon grew around an ironworks opened in 1788, part of which is now a museum. The steel-making and coal mining industries followed, boosting the town's population to over 20,000 at one time, but since the ironworks closed in 1900 and the coal mine in 1980, the population has declined, and now consists mostly of older citizens.

Book Town Blaenavon
Book Town Blaenavon

Attempts have recently been made to turn the town's image around by introducing it as Wales's second "book town" (the first being Hay-on-Wye). However after over a year of attempts to attract visitors the project seems not to have succeeded. This can be attributed to a combination of the town's remote location and its local reputation as a very undesirable destination. This is an unfair, but true opinion of the town, as investment and local interest have completely transformed the town's main thoroughfare (Broad Street) and the book shops stock good quality and excellent value books. There are many thriving community groups within the town, including Future Blaenavon, which has helped to create a community garden at the bottom of the town.

Attractions in the town include the Big Pit Mining Museum (an Anchor Point of ERIH, The European Route of Industrial Heritage), Blaenavon Iron Works, the Pontypool and Blaenavon Railway, and the Blaenavon Male Voice Choir.

Blaenavon is twinned with Coutras, France.

[edit] The Time Team Dig

The history and archeology Channel 4 TV programme, Time Team came to Blaenavon during its February 2001 series(airing date) to find 'The lost viaduct', the world's first railway viaduct(used by horse drawn wagons, carrying coal from the mines) which had been built in 1790, measuring 40 metres long and 10 metres high, and yet within about 25 years of its construction, it had completely disappeared. But with no records of its demolition, the group were there to both try to locate the structure, and to see if it was still there.

The results of this were that, eventually, during the mid-late afternoon of the final (third) day of the 'dig' they managed to uncover the top of the viaduct, which had an arched roof, beneath 12-15 metres of rubble and earth, seemingly still standing, however due to the fact that it was so late in the day, on the last day, they were unable to dig any further, but it means that future archeological excavations should be more successful.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links/References


v  d  e
World Heritage Sites in the United Kingdom (list)
Stonehenge

England: Blenheim Palace · Canterbury Cathedral, St Augustine's AbbeySt. Martin's Church · Bath · Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape · Derwent Valley Mills · Durham Castle & Cathedral · Ironbridge Gorge · Jurassic Coast · Kew Gardens · Liverpool · Maritime Greenwich · Westminster Palace, Westminster Abbey St. Margaret's · Saltaire · Stonehenge & Avebury · Studley Royal Park & Fountains Abbey · Tower of London

Scotland: Edinburgh Old TownNew Town · Heart of Neolithic Orkney (Maeshowe, Ring of Brodgar, Skara Brae, Standing Stones of Stenness) · New Lanark · St Kilda

Wales: Castles and Town Walls of King Edward I in Gwynedd (Beaumaris Castle, Caernarfon Castle, Conwy Castle, Harlech Castle) · Blaenavon

Northern Ireland: Giant's Causeway

Overseas territories: Henderson Island · Gough Island and Inaccessible Island · St. George's

Transboundary: Frontiers of the Roman Empire (Hadrian's Wall)


Coordinates: 51.77919° N 3.08129° W