Even
in the short time I have been in Wales – not yet five years, I have seen
massive change in Cardiff and not, in my opinion, for the better. Rather than
valuing the city’s history with projects that conserve and restore life to the
heritage buildings, the city council seems intent on letting developers swamp Cardiff’s
lovely old buildings with tall and ugly tower blocks. And don’t even get me
started on the (surely now) outdated trend of façadism – there are at least two
such construction projects underway in the central city as I write this – such
lazy architectural design!
The
reason for today’s rant is that I almost missed seeing what remains of St
Mary’s Church because of yet another inner city construction project. The
church itself is long gone – and I do mean long
– due to the severe damage it suffered in the Great Flood of 1607, the church
was abandoned in 1701. But the ghost of the church remains as an outline of pale
stones on the side of the building that now stands where it once stood.
John Speed's 1610 map of Cardiff, Wikimedia Commons; St Mary's is at bottom right |
St Mary’s began life as a Benedictine priory way back in 1107, but its riverside
location (prior to the River Taff being diverted in 1850) meant it was always
susceptible to flooding and, apparently, bodies were frequently washed out of
its graveyard.
In
1878, the site of St Mary’s was used for the construction of a theatre, the NewTheatre Royal, but that once grand building has seen many subsequent
reincarnations, even for a time being a cinema showing pornographic films – I can’t
imagine what the Benedictines would have thought of that. The building is
currently a Wetherspoon’s pub, the Prince of Wales.
I
don’t know how visible the outline of St Mary’s will be once the current
construction project, part of the Central Square development, is finished but,
if the wide expanses of bland concrete underfoot and the wind-tunnel-creating
skyscrapers overhead are anything to go by, I doubt the developers would have
even considered a nod to Cardiff’s historic past, so I’m glad I managed to pay
homage to the old St Mary’s Church before it disappears.
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