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'Win-win' plan for pretty North Wales town 'gridlocked' by surging tourism

'Win-win' plan for pretty North Wales town 'gridlocked' by surging tourism

Wales Online14-05-2025

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A picturesque Dee Valley town is to get almost 180 new parking spaces to cope with surging visitor numbers. In peak season Llangollen can struggle to accommodate the influx and there are fears the town centre squeeze will tighten if the town is included in a new national park.
Llangollen has six car parks, one of which is the most lucrative in Denbighshire. These include a site at Llangollen Pavilion, home to the town's International Musical Eisteddfod, which on Thursday, May 15, will open up a new parking area.
The Eisteddfod team, which now manages the Pavilion, said it took action because Llangollen town centre often suffers from a lack of car parking spaces. David Hennigan, Eisteddfod Board director, said the new facility was much needed.
'The other day I was speaking to someone from Ruthin who said they would like to visit Llangollen more often but they always found it a struggle to park," he said. 'Over the last Bank Holiday weekend, you could see cars driving around trying to find some where to park – the town centre was rammed! It's been a major issue in Llangollen for a while.
'It seemed such a shame that when Llangollen was gridlocked, we had all this space available on the Pavilion grounds just a few minutes walk away. As we're always trying to encourage town centre trade, we hope this provision will help - we see it as a win-win for everyone.'
Llangollen, next to the river Dee, is a gateway-to-Wales town that attracts thousands of tourists. Part of a World Heritage Site, thanks to its popular canal, the town's heritage railway is a major draw and the countless walkers are attracted by its scenic hills.
At the Pavilion, 80 new hard-surface parking spaces will be available in an area allocated for stalls during the Eisteddfod. The rest will be on grass and both areas will be open year-round. Join the North Wales Live Whatsapp community now
(Image: Ian Cooper/North Wales Live)
Costs for the main car park will be from 70p for 30 minutes, £6 for up to eight hours and £10 for 12 hours. The Pavilion field car park will have the same charges but with a maximum time limit of eight hours.
There will be a variety of ways to pay - but there will be no overnight parking. Parents dropping off and picking up Ysgol Dinas Bran pupils will not have to pay.
To monitor the car park and Eisteddfod grounds, Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) cameras have been installed, operating round the clock. Organisers believes that by improving security, it will deter anti-social behaviour and reassure visitors wanting to spend the day in the Llangollen area.
The Pavilion already has an 80-space car park but, being 500 metres from the town centre, it is relatively under utilised. Denbighshire Council data shows that, in 2023/24, the Pavilion's existing car park generated a revenue of £3,484.73 – more than 50 times less than the 147-space council-run Market Street facility in the centre of Llangollen.
Parking pressures in the town are illustrated by the rising number of parking fines being issued at the long-stay Market Street car park. In 2023, 359 Penalty Charge Notices (PCNs) were issued by the council, up 146 on the previous year. In the following year, this number had almost been matched by mid August 2024 (349 PCNs).
(Image: Stephen McKay/Wiki)
The new edge-of-town parking provision won't resolve all issues as it won't be available when there are no events on at the Pavilion or its grounds.
But John Gambles, chair of the Llangollen Eisteddfod, expects this will be infrequent and believes the new facility will boost the local economy. He said: 'For as long as I can remember, parking has been a huge issue in the centre of Llangollen.
'When we took over the Pavilion full-time in April, one of the first things we did was look if it was possible to open up our site for additional car parking. Any revenue raised will go towards running the Pavilion for the benefit of Llangollen and towards the running of the Llangollen Eisteddfod.'
The Dee Valley is earmarked for inclusion in Wales' newest national park, currently going through stages of designation. Research by property firm Purplebricks revealed that properties inside the proposed national park area are already up to £100,000 more expensive than equivalents outside.
Critics fear a further surge in popularity in places like Llangollen if the national park comes to fruition. Sign up for the North Wales Live newsletter sent twice daily to your inbox
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Pavarotti's widow 'deeply honoured' to award prizes at North Wales festival that inspired his dream
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Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info The widow of superstar tenor Luciano Pavarotti is making an emotional visit to Llangollen International Eisteddfod which inspired his stellar career. Nicoletta Mantovani says she's 'deeply honoured' to be presenting a trophy to the winner of a competition to find an opera star of the future aiming to follow in his illustrious footsteps. During her trip she will also be marking several major milestones, the 70th anniversary of his first experience of the festival, the 30th anniversary of his triumphant return in 1995 and what would have been his 90th birthday on October 12 this year. Pavarotti was just 19 and a trainee teacher when he came to the Llangollen Eisteddfod in 1955 with his father, Fernando, as part of Chorus Rossini, from their home city of Modena. They left as the overall winning choir and Pavarotti went home determined to make music his career and later said that winning at Llangollen was the spark that ignited his dream. When he came back as a global icon for a sell-out concert in 1995, he said: 'I always say that to the journalists when they ask me what is a day more memorable in my life, and I always say that it is when I won this competition because it was with all my friends.' Nicoletta Mantovani is journeying from her home in Italy to hand over the coveted Pendine Trophy to the winner of the Pendine International Voice of the Future competition, the final of which is on the closing Sunday evening of the 2025 festival. Sharing the presentation will her be Mario Kreft MBE and his wife, Gill, owners of the arts-loving Pendine Park care organisation which is once again sponsoring the award, and another megastar of the opera world, Sir Bryn Terfel. And in another coup for the Eisteddfod, the previous evening Nicoletta will have been on the world-famous Pavilion stage to hand the Pavarotti Trophy, named in honour of her late husband, to the winners of the Choir of the World Competition alongside festival chair John Gambles. Nicoletta Mantovani said: 'I am deeply honoured and excited to be coming to the Llangollen International Eisteddfod to make both these amazing prize presentations. That is because this festival was the beginning of everything for Luciano and to mark both these anniversaries is very important,' said Nicoletta who founded and became president of the Pavarotti Foundation following his death. The foundation organises tribute concerts with opera stars such as Jose Carreras and Placido Domingo, hosts exhibitions reflecting Pavarotti's life and work and also arranges performances by young opera singers discovered or promoted by the Foundation. 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Pavarotti's widow 'deeply honoured' to award prizes at North Wales festival that inspired his dream
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Sign up for the North Wales Live newsletter sent twice daily to your inbox Nicoletta said: 'Luciano had two dreams. The first was to bring opera to everyone and the second was to bring new people into the world of opera who could become the singers of the future, which both of these Eisteddfod competitions fulfil. 'Coming to Llangollen will be very emotional for me because without his first appearance there in 1955 he told me his career would not have been possible. 'He would tell me how his choir did not expect to win, how they waited for the announcement and first came the choir who were in sixth place, then fifth and so on. They were concerned but when it got to the second place and their name had still not been called they knew they had won and they cried with joy. 'In 1995 Luciano wanted to go back there to celebrate the 40th anniversary of that win and to inspire others about opera because it was such a special place.' 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Lost railway line next to the River Dee to be transformed
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