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Penarth Pier

Coordinates: 51°26′6.31″N 3°9′59.43″W / 51.4350861°N 3.1665083°W / 51.4350861; -3.1665083
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Penarth Pier
The pier pavilion
TypeCast iron screw piers, cast iron supports, wooden deck
CarriesPedestrians
SpansBristol Channel
LocalePenarth, Vale of Glamorgan, South Wales
OwnerVale of Glamorgan Council
Characteristics
Total lengthAs built:750 feet (230 m)
Present: 650 feet (200 m)
History
DesignerH. F. Edwards
ConstructorMayohs Brothers
Opening dateFebruary 1895; 129 years ago (1895-02)
Coordinates51°26′6.31″N 3°9′59.43″W / 51.4350861°N 3.1665083°W / 51.4350861; -3.1665083

Penarth Pier is a Victorian era pier in the town of Penarth, Vale of Glamorgan, South Wales. The pier was opened in 1898 and was a popular attraction to seaside-goers at the time, who also enjoyed trips on pleasure steamers that operated from the pier. It has on several occasions been damaged by vessels colliding with the structure and in 1931, a fire broke out in one of the pavilions. This wooden pavilion was never replaced, but a concrete pavilion has been used over the years as a concert hall, ballroom, cinema and for other purposes. It is currently home to the Penarth Pier Pavilion.

Background

Penarth Pier in about 1900.

The growing popularity of Penarth beach and the need for better communications with Cardiff led to the Cardiff Steam and Navigation Company starting a regular ferry service between Cardiff and Penarth in 1856, which continued until 1903. Boats were loaded and unloaded at Penarth using a landing stage on wheels which was hauled up the beach.[1]

In the 1880s an attempt was made to construct a permanent pier, because of the need to find a safer way to unload larger boats. However, construction ground to a halt at an early stage when the London-based contractors went into liquidation.[1]

Construction

As a result, the Penarth Promenade and Landing Company Ltd was formed, to make a second attempt at building a permanent pier. Designed by H. F. Edwards,[2] construction of the cast iron screw piers, cast iron supports and wooden deck was begun by Mayohs Brothers in 1894.[3] The pier successfully opened in 1895, 750 feet (230 m) long.[4]

History

The rear of the pier pavilion
The pavilion in 2009
The pavilion in 2013

The pier was opened in 1898, having been constructed by James & Arthur Mayoh, assisted by Herbert Francis Edwards, a local engineer. The pier, at 658 ft (200 m), was rather short; it was not permitted to be longer for fear of obstructing the deep water channel into Cardiff Docks. It was built of cast iron with a timber decking, and acted both as a promenade, and as a landing jetty for steam ships trading in the Bristol Channel. The pier was an immediate success, chiefly because the cruises, provided by the pleasure steamers that used the pier’s landing stage, proved very popular with the public. In 1907, a small wooden "Concert Party" theatre was built at the far end of the pier.[2]

During World War I, the pleasure steamers were used as minesweepers and the pier was requisitioned by the army. After the war, it was found that the landing stage was considerably damaged, and compensation payments were inadequate to fund the necessary repairs. The pier went into a period of decline, and in 1929, it was sold to Penarth Borough Council. As a result, a new concrete landing stage was built at the seaward end,[2] and in 1930, a spectacular Art Deco pavilion, built of ferro-concrete, was constructed at the shoreward end.[5][6]

An aerial photograph of the pier in 2006

On August Bank Holiday 1931,[2] a fire broke out in the wooden theatre. A dramatic sea and land rescue commenced, with the fire department attending the scene until the fire burnt out three days later.[7] Over 800 people survived.[2] As a result, a large proportion of the pier was destroyed.[5] The pier was rebuilt at a cost of £3,157, without replacement of the wooden pavilion.[6]

The remaining pavilion provided concerts and variety shows, but over time, people's tastes changed and the pavilion was turned into a cinema. This was unsuccessful however, and the cinema closed. After another attempt at operating it as a concert hall, it reopened in 1934 as the Marina Ballroom. This flourished and dances were taking place there until the start of World War II in 1939. At this time the paddle steamers were requisitioned and the pier closed to the public.[2]

In 1947 the 7,130 ton Canadian cargo steamship SS Port Royal Park, under contract to the flag of the Tavistock Shipping Company, collided with the pier in a gale causing severe structural damage.[8] The damage included the shattering and buckling of the decking, but more seriously, the fracturing or displacing of over seventy of the main supporting cast-iron structures. Repairs, including underpinning to the cast iron columns and the addition of new cast concrete columns,[2] took two years to complete at a cost of £28,000.[6] The pier reopened in 1950.[2]

In August 1966, whilst operating in dense fog,[2] the 600-ton P & A Campbell pleasure steamer PS Bristol Queen hit the pier, causing an estimated £25,000 damage.[5][9] The last regular paddle steamer service operated by the White Funnel Line was withdrawn in 1966 although the MV Balmoral continued to operate a cruise service. Even this was withdrawn in 1982 when cruises by P&A Campbell from the pier ceased.[2]

In 1994, a restoration programme was completed at a cost of £650,000, including repairs to the rotting substructure. This wood now forms one of the offerings at the souvenir shop.[2] In 1996 a £1.7M programme started, replacing steelwork, decking and the berthing pontoon. The final restoration was completed after a £1.1M grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, with the restored 650 feet (200 m) formally reopening in May 1998.[2]

The pier pavilion

The 1929 designed art deco Pier Pavilion, opened in 1930 by the council, was used as a venue for traditional seaside entertainment, as well as a concert hall. As it lacked heating, the hall was greatly under utilised in the winter, although it was used at different periods as a cinema, dance hall (Marina ballroom) and nightclub.[2]

From the 1960s onwards, it was rented out to a series of commercial tenant customers, who used it as a restaurant and snooker club. In 1961, former Olympics gymnast Gwynedd Lingard founded the Penarth and district gymnastics club, which today is the sole tenant.[2]

In 2008, the charity Penarth Arts & Crafts Ltd (PACL) was formed to restore the pavilion. In November 2009 PACL were awarded a Heritage Lottery Fund grant of £99,600 to develop plans for detailed restoration. PACL have now developed a £3.9m refurbishment scheme, to use enable the pavilion to be restored as a cinema, cafe, observatory and multi-purpose community complex. After planning permission was granted for the project, the HLF awarded PACT a further £1.68m in May 2011. The project was completed in 2013 and is known as the Penarth Pier Pavilion.[10][11]

Penarth Pier in 2008.

Present

Owned today by Vale of Glamorgan Council, the pier is open all year round. Sea fishing is possible from the pier head, without a licence, in all months except June, July and August.

The refurbished Pier Pavilion

The Penarth Pier Pavilion includes an art gallery, auditorium, a cinema able to seat seventy, retail area, bar, and a tea room with a view out over the Bristol Channel.

Dr David Trotman, was appointed director in 2013 and said that he was excited and privileged to serve the community, and added that the "iconic pier site would be used to educate, inform and entertain." Since then, renovation of the exterior has taken place, and ornamental zinc tiles have been installed to replace the faded paint on the barrel roof and four domes.

The pier was voted Pier of the Year by the National Piers Society in 2014.[12]

Since 2007, the pier has appeared on S4C in an ident as part of its on-air branding.

The pier appeared in the 2008 BBC Torchwood episode "To the Last Man", in which characters Tosh and Tommy share a brief moment on Penarth Pier, built in 1894, the same year that Tommy was born.[13]

A new director, Marta Ghermandi, was appointed by the Board of Penarth Arts and Crafts Limited, in 2018.

Notes

  1. ^ a b Carradice, P. (1994). Penarth Pier: The Centenary Story 1894–1994. BARON.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Penarth Pier". National Piers Society. Archived from the original on 13 January 2012. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  3. ^ "Penarth Pier". The Heritage Trail. Archived from the original on 19 April 2012. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  4. ^ Williams, S. (1975). South Glamorgan: A County History. Stewart Williams.
  5. ^ a b c "Penarth Pier". Vale of Glamorgan Council. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  6. ^ a b c "History of Penarth Pier". Penarth Pier Project. Archived from the original on 6 March 2012. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  7. ^ Phil Carradice (14 September 2011). "The Penarth Pier fire of 1931". BBC Wales. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  8. ^ Penarth Times online LOOKING BACK: I remember that... Letter published 22 May 2008
  9. ^ Walesonline.co.uk Time Traveller: August 17, 1966 Article reproduced from 1966 South Wales Echo. Retrieved 2011-10-19
  10. ^ "Penarth Pavilion Project". Penarth Pavilion Project. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  11. ^ "Revamp go-ahead for pier". South Wales Echo. 4 March 2011. Retrieved 19 October 2011.
  12. ^ "Pier of the Year". National Pier Society. Archived from the original on 24 June 2014. Retrieved 27 June 2014.
  13. ^ "Penarth Pier". Doctor Who Locations. Retrieved 24 February 2012.

References

  • Carradice, P. (1994). Penarth Pier: The Centenary Story 1894–1994. BARON.
  • Williams, S. (1975). South Glamorgan: A County History. Stewart Williams.
Awards and achievements
Preceded by National Piers Society
Pier of the Year

2014
Succeeded by