BangorSights

Sights in Bangor

  1. A

    Cathedral Church of St Deiniol

    Also called the Cathedral Church of St Deiniol, the cathedral - surprisingly squat, partly due to lack of cash for a central spire - occupies one of the oldest ecclesiastical sites in Britain. Dedicated to St Deiniol, who founded a cell here in AD 525 and who was consecrated as bishop in AD 546, the cathedral's earliest traces are of a 12th-century stone building, while some of what you see today is based on reconstruction work in the late 13th century.

    Responsibility for damage can be blamed on King John, whose men also burned the city, seized the bishop and ransomed him for 200 falcons. Further ravages took place at the turn of the 15th century, during the Glyndŵr rebel…

    reviewed

  2. B

    Penrhyn Castle

    About 1.5 miles east of town, Penrhyn Castle is a fine example of neo-Norman architecture set in beautiful grounds with parkland and wooded walks. Managed by the NT today, it was built between 1820 and 1845 on the spoils of Welsh slate and Jamaican sugar, and designed by Thomas Hopper for the wealthy Pennant family.

    It's a vast, extravagant place, with a great hall modelled on Durham Cathedral in England, rooms full of Hopper's mock-Norman furniture, stained glass and hand-painted wallpaper - not to mention a one-ton slate bed built for Queen Victoria. The lofty grand staircase took 10 years to build while adjacent stable blocks are home to several galleries and mini-muse…

    reviewed

  3. C

    Bangor Museum & Art Gallery

    This museum is small in scale and not consistently well labelled, but it does offer some potent evocations of past lives in Bangor and the surrounding countryside. The furniture display boasts some glorious Welsh dressers and a colossal 17th-century dower chest. A gruesome mantrap shows that feeding the family wasn't always a doddle.

    Upstairs, a compact but very-well-labelled archaeological exhibition takes you from Palaeolithic to medieval times. It's most worthwhile if you are visiting nearby sites.

    reviewed

  4. D

    Victorian Pier

    Built in 1896, the Victorian pier, with its fanciful Oriental kiosks, is a lovely place for a stroll, stretching 450m out into the Menai Strait - seemingly almost to Anglesey. In the distance you can see Thomas Telford's handsome Menai Suspension Bridge. There are several small shops, a café and you can fish here (permits around £2/£1 per adult/child).

    reviewed

  5. E

    Bangor Museum & Art Gallery

    This museum is small in scale and not consistently well labelled, but it does offer some potent evocations of past lives in Bangor and the surrounding countryside. The furniture display boasts some glorious Welsh dressers and a colossal 17th-century dower chest. A gruesome mantrap shows that feeding the family wasn't always a doddle.

    Upstairs, a compact but very-well-labelled archaeological exhibition takes you from Palaeolithic to medieval times. It's most worthwhile if you are visiting nearby sites.

    reviewed