Local Attractions
Glan
yr Afon Nature Reserve and Slaughterhouse
The Nature Reserve
In 2006 Kidwelly Town Council and the
Countryside Council for Wales started to work together on a project
that recognised and identified Glan yr Afon as area of outstanding
beauty and of considerable benefit to the local wildlife. It is
the intention of the project to protect and preserve the site and
its many habitats, various flora and fauna, including two types
of rare orchids, for the enjoyment people of Kidwelly and the surrounding
area. The site is also a haven for the different wildlife and
birdlife which visits the nearby Special Area of Conservation (SACs),
in the Carmarthen Estuary, a site which has received European recognition
for its diversity of wildlife on the salt marshes.
The Tidal Saltings
The Nature reserve
at Glan yr Afon would have been a tidal salting during the period
when the slaughterhouse was in use and before. Tidal saltings are
a type of marshy land that can be become flooded by the tides from
the sea or the Gwendraeth Estuary. The land at Glan yr Afon would
have been very similar to the land opposite the Kidwelly Quay,
which is known as the Kidwelly Burrows. The tidal saltings would
have been used to graze animals.
The Lagoon
Glan yr Afon is home to a Lagoon, built by the, now closed,
British American Optical Company. Known as a Settlement Lagoon,
it was used as a disposal site for a solution of ground glass.
The lagoon is the last of many to have occupied
this site. The lagoon has been capped with soil, and is fenced
away from the general public. The disposal of this effluent was
approved by Welsh Water Authority as being suitable in this environment.
The Tip
In the 1960s the tidal
saltings were excavated and used by the then Llanelli Borough Council
for the tipping of domestic and trade refuse (building materials).
In 1987 the tip was closed and a soil cap was placed over the site.
Sustrans path
As part of the “making good” of the old tip and
the regeneration of the site a gravel path was created around the
old tip besides the river. This path has been upgraded and tarmaced
and has been adopted as a part of the Sustrans cycle route number
4 which travels through Wales.
The Slaughterhouse
Built 1895 by the Corporation of Kidwelly for the disposal of
animals from the Kidwelly Market that used to be held opposite
the Boot and Shoe public house. There are six buildings of varying
structural condition that still survive to date. The associated
animal pens have been removed, one of which was redeveloped in
2004 as part of the first phase of the Glan yr Afon regeneration.
This Slaughterhouse is currently part of a separate project involving
Kidwelly Town Council, the Welsh Assembly and Carmarthenshire County
Council. This project has been ongoing for many years and has seen
many different suggestions for its regeneration and even demolition.
Recently, a report by the local Archaeological Trust, Cambria,
has shown the building to have very unique features, not found
in any other building structure in South Wales.
Dimech’s
Factory
The Factory owned by the Maltese entrepreneur Mr Anthony
Dimech was erected in the late 1960s. The factory produced car
components and was in operation until the 1970s. In 1980 a fire
destroyed everything apart from the large steel structure and the
outbuildings. During the 1980s and 1990s the site deteriorated
very rapidly becoming both and eyesore and a danger to the public.
The area known as the Dimech’s was redeveloped in 2004 and is now
the Glan yr Afon Coach and Car park. Involved in carrying out this
project were, Kidwelly Town Council, the Glan yr Afon Working Group
Carmarthenshire County Council, Mott MacDonald (consultants), Kingston
Construction and the then Project Officer Ceris Harries.
On the
25th April during the opening of the site a “time capsule” was
buried at the site. Pupils from Ysgol y Castell, Ysgol Gwenllian
and Ysgol Mynyddygarreg and members from Kidwelly Town Council
and the Kidwelly Working Group selected the items that were placed
in the capsule.
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