
All the best things to do in Pontcanna, Cardiff's most stylish neighbourhood
P ontcanna, located close to Cardiff city centre, has blossomed into a stylish neighbourhood with much to offer families and young professionals. Smart, cool with a distinct Welsh feel, it's home to leafy high streets with flourishing independent shops, cafes and restaurants. It's a great place to taste local produce, from treats in the park to Michelin-starred tasting menus – Pontcanna claims Cardiff's first.
The neighbourhood's popularity dates to the Victorian period, when Sophia, widow of the second Marquess of Bute, financed the creation of Sophia Gardens. Large villas sprang up along the central Cathedral Road as well as the side streets, which in turn became an illustrious Edwardian area.
These houses are now gold dust – no surprise, given their backdrop of sweeping green spaces and quirky neighbourhood gems all within a 30-minute walk to Cardiff Central train station.
Here's our guide to experience the best of Pontcanna.
Read more: North Wales is the perfect gateway to developing a hiking habit Do Browse the local farmer's market
The Saturday market hosts local vendors and supports sustainable practices (Pontcanna Market)
Every Saturday, the courtyard on King's Road becomes lively with vendors selling fresh local produce. Pick up some sourdough and mouth-watering pastries, organic fruit and vegetables, and Welsh cheese. Each month, the sellers are joined by Pontcanna Vintage Market, where you can pick up a one-off item. Catch a foreign film at Chapter Art Centre
Free art exhibitions, independent film screenings and up-and-coming stand-up comedy, Chapter Art Centre is the alternative creative outlet in Pontcanna. With events including Archipelago Movement classes and a workshop exploring the ritual of communal singing as a survival mechanism, this is not your everyday community venue. The events programme and convivial cafe breathe life into the red-brick former Edwardian school building. Spend time in historic parks
Pristine and atmospheric, the neighbourhood's parks – like Llandaff Fields and Pontcanna Fields – are a favoured local spots for picnics, dog walking, cycling, tennis and children's playgrounds. Enjoy a rustic pizza or a homemade sarnie from Cafe Castan – which does a roaring trade on Saturdays after Park Run – before tracing its footpath at points lined with lime trees. If Glamorgan Cricket Club is playing at home, you'll hear cheers spill out from neighbouring Sophia Gardens, Cardiff's international cricket venue.
Cross over Blackweir Bridge into Bute Park, home to manicured gardens, wood sculptures and a significant arboretum as well as the modern Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama and several of Cardiff University's grand buildings. Rest your legs at the Secret Garden Cafe, which serves delicious cakes and coffee and is entirely powered by solar energy.
At the opposite end of this grade II-listed green space, at the entrance to the city centre, you'll find Cardiff Castle, which you can visit on a tour or admire from the grounds.
Cardiff Castle is surrounded by the city's grade II-listed parklands (Getty Images)
Read more: The best beaches in Pembrokeshire Go courtside at a premier sports centre
Get stuck into the Welsh sporting culture with facilities fit for elite athletes. Show off your forehand at the bookable tennis, badminton, squash and even table tennis courts at Sport Wales National Centre. Located next to the Taff Trail walking route, it's easy to incorporate as you meander into Cardiff city centre.
Read more: Cardiff city guide – where to stay, eat, drink and shop in the Welsh capital Eat Milkwood
Neighbourhood hangout Milkwood serves up creative twists on familiar favourites (Owen Mathias)
Trendy spot Milkwood has the city flocking to try its simple and delicious brunch offerings. With a menu inspired by Welsh ingredients, opt for bacon, cockles and laverbread (a type of edible seaweed) on toast, or visit after dusk for bespoke cocktails designed by award-winning local bartender Alex Taylor, and pizzettes (aka small pizzas). Bant a la Cart
This sweet neighbourhood deli is a staple on Cathedral Road, Pontcanna's main road. Locals queue to pick up homemade options for lunch or dinner from their counter of daily soups, hot dishes, quiches and cakes.
Read more: Cardiff city guide – where to stay, eat, drink and shop in the Welsh capital Elgano
Set in a Victorian terrace house, Elgano is a quaint Italian restaurant with attentive service and a relaxed ambience. A love letter to the dishes they cooked growing up in Sicily and Calabria in Southern Italy, the chefs have crafted a menu to introduce guests to those familiar flavours. Watch them prepare everything from the open kitchen over a glass of robust chianti. Gorse
The oft-changing tasting menus at Gorse showcase the finest Welsh produce available in a given week (Gorse/ Will Barker)
Winner of Cardiff's first Michelin star, Gorse delivers simple but clever food in an unpretentious and intimate setting. The tasting menu showcases Welsh produce in exceptional ways, from native seaweed and Gower Salt Marsh lamb to Caws Cerwyn, a creamy Welsh cheese. With years of training under Heston Blumenthal, Welsh chef-founder Tom Walters has ditched the London pomp to bring his homeland a chilled-out fine dining experience that is a tribute to the surrounding landscapes of his beloved homeland. Drink Wardrobe Cafe
Slowly sip coffee and enjoy organic treats in Wardrobe Cafe's quaint front room. With French artwork, rustic wood and an elegant piano, whisk yourself away to Provence for a couple of hours in this tucked-away spot.
Organic coffee, teas and toasties are among the delights found in The Wardrobe Coffee Shop (Pontcanna Market) Pontcanna Inn
On game days, this friendly neighbourhood pub rivals those on St Mary's Street, one of Cardiff's liveliest. Pontcanna Inn's large beer garden comes to life with rigby fever on summer nights. After a few pints, a slice from the pub's pizza van is well received. Crafty Devil's Cellar
Set up as an alternative to large-scale breweries, Crafty Devil's Cellar quenches the city's thirst for local beers. If you want to try something new, choose from their selection of unique casks, such as coffee milk stout which boasts freshly roasted coffee from café Hard Lines as well as roasted caramel malts. Cans or pints can be enjoyed at a stool while watching the match on the pub's TV, or taken away for another time. Uisce
A wine and oyster bar without pomp and ceremony, Uisce was the first venture from the team behind Heaneys, the next-door fine dining restaurant. Serving a great wine list and seasonal cocktails, bar snacks and freshly shucked oysters paired with live music on Sundays, this is an elegant spot to begin the night.
Chic bar Uisce offers a happy hour every day (Heaneys) Where to stay
Set in the heart of the neighbourhood, The Pontcanna Inn offers an ideal base to explore and get out to the rest of Cardiff on foot. The townhouse's spacious, modern rooms are conveniently equipped and feel inviting after a day in the lively Welsh capital.
Read more: How this eco-campsite in North Wales became a haven for frazzled Londoners
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Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Britain's railway deserts revealed: Map shows which UK towns are furthest from their local train station as some face two-hour long journey to reach their nearest platform
From seaside resorts to market towns surrounded by beautiful countryside, they are among Britain's most picturesque locations. But if you fancy a visit and don't have a car, you can probably forget about it – as these spots are also some of the country's worst-connected areas by rail. MailOnline has looked at the towns furthest away from stations - finding that Campbeltown, the UK's cheapest seaside location for buying a house, comes top. Further popular coastal locations in South West England such as Minehead and Bude are also more than 20 miles away from stations, as is Hay-on-Wye in Wales. Elsewhere, other towns do have stations but the services are so infrequent that they are often deserted - with Denton near Manchester being the UK's least-used. And the winding nature of some rural routes in Scotland and Wales means towns in areas connected by rail are still much quicker to travel between by car. Here is a look at where in the UK could be defined as a 'railway desert': Furthest towns from stations The UK's most remote town for rail travel is Campbeltown in Argyll and Bute, which is 87 miles or more than two hours' drive away from the nearest station at Oban. The setting hit the headlines this week for being the UK's cheapest seaside town, with research by Lloyds Bank finding it would cost a buyer an average of £103,000. Campbeltown is also a rare example of a UK location that has never been connected to the country's main rail network, even before the Beeching cuts of the 1960s. All it has ever had was a station on a light railway network to nearby Machrihanish between 1906 and 1934, although it does have an airport given its remote setting. While Scotland has several scenic rural lines serving hamlets, some bigger towns lack a station. These include Fraserburgh in Aberdeenshire, which is 35 miles from the nearest stop at Inverurie. Nearby Peterhead is 31 miles from the same station. The town in England furthest from a station is thought to be Bude in Cornwall, at 29 miles from Okehampton. Minehead in Somerset follows, at 24 miles from Taunton station. Another popular but hard-to-reach town by rail is Hay-on-Wye in Powys, which is 21 miles from the nearest stop at Hereford on the other side of the England/Wales border. Other destinations far from train stations include Middleton-in-Teesdale in County Durham, which is 21 miles from the nearest stop at Bishop Auckland. Hawick in the Scottish Borders is 17 miles from Tweedbank station; while Keswick in Cumbria is 17 miles from Penrith station. Meanwhile Hunstanton in Norfolk is 16 miles from King's Lynn station; and Louth in Lincolnshire is 15 miles from Market Rasen station. Least-used stations While the above locations have no station at all, other parts of the country remain badly-connected despite trains still operating through them due to their infrequency. For example, Denton in Greater Manchester was Britain's least-used railway station in 2023/24 with 54 entries and exits. It is on the line between Stockport and Stalybridge, which was built to take trains to Leeds but saw its timetable cut in the 1990s after services were re-routed. Denton is served by two Northern trains per week – one in each direction – which are both on Saturday mornings. A train to Stockport departs at 8.42am, while a service to Stalybridge leaves at 9.04am. Railway stations are often kept open despite being rarely used because it is easier to arrange for a train to stop infrequently than obtain permission for closure. In second place was Shippea Hill in Cambridgeshire with 70 entries and exits, while Ince & Elton in Cheshire was third with 86; and Polesworth in Warwickshire fourth with 118. Reddish South in Greater Manchester came fifth with 128; Coombe Junction Halt in Cornwall was sixth with 140; and Chapelton in Devon with 186. Completing the top ten were Clifton in Greater Manchester with 202; Elton & Orston in Nottinghamshire with 212 and Kildonan in the Highlands with 240. Estimates of entries and exits are published by the Office of Rail and Road (ORR) and are largely based on ticket sales, with the latest set being released last November. Worst performing stations Another metric for looking at the UK's worst areas for train connections is to consider performance over the past six months, as ranked by the website On Time Trains. This puts Ynyswen station in South Wales top of the pile, followed by Lockerbie in Scotland in second, then Penrith and Oxenholme in Cumbria in third and fourth. Also in the top ten are Kearsley and Blackrod in Greater Manchester; Chilworth in Surrey; Baglan and Llansamlet in South Wales; and Dolwyddelan in North Wales. However, many of these stations are rural with a low service frequencies, and so their performance figures can be skewed by a relatively small number of cancellations. A further measure to consider is therefore the worst performing stations out of the top 500 busiest stations, which puts Deansgate in Manchester at the top. Many of the others in the top ten are in the North West - including Lancaster in second, Warrington Bank Quay in third and Manchester Oxford Road in fifth. Also on the list are Tamworth, Macclesfield, Bolton, Stoke-on-Trent and Stafford – with Mill Hill Broadway in North West London completing the set. Narrowing this down to the top 100 busiest stations, the worst performing are Manchester Oxford Road, Milton Keynes Central, City Thameslink in London, Manchester Piccadilly and York. Also in that top ten are Coventry, St Albans, Bath Spa, Leicester and Sheffield. Other anomalies Some locations are connected to major stations by train, but the journey can take significantly longer than by car given the slow pace of services. For example, Inverness to Wick on the Far North line in Scotland takes just over four-and-half hours by train, compared to about two hours and 20 minutes by road. Others include Shrewsbury to Pwhelli in Wales which is nearly four hours by train but again about two hours and 20 minutes by road. Another example is Middlesbrough to Whitby in North Yorkshire which is over one-and-a-half hours by train but 50 minutes by car. And in South Wales, if you want to get from Swansea to Aberystwyth by rail it will take more than five hours going via Shrewsbury - or just over two hours by car. And the largest town in Britain that cannot be reached by train is believed to be Gosport in Hampshire, after the station was closed to passengers in 1953. The town is however only five miles away from Fareham station, and is linked to nearby Portsmouth via the Gosport Ferry which takes about four minutes.


BBC News
7 hours ago
- BBC News
Gavin and Stacey star Joanna Page wrote autobiography at night in pub car park
As she turns the page of her career, Joanna Page felt the time was right for her only problem was finding the right time and place to actually write answer would prove to be a disused pub car park, or outside a cricket club in the middle of the night or even in a car in front of her own the result, as well as exhausting, has been "like a therapy session" for the Gavin and Stacey star as she looks towards the next chapter of her life. "I love telling stories and was very exciting thinking I'm going to write my life story because a lot of things have happened. But, trying to do that while looking after four children and four guinea pigs and a hunky husband is quite hard work," she told Behnaz Akhgar on BBC Radio Wales. "So at five o'clock I'll hand the kids over to James, make myself a quick cup of tea, grab a chocolate bar and drive to a little local pub that is just waiting to change hands, so nobody is going there. "I'll park in the car park, think of stories and write notes until 11.30 at night when I'll start freaking out, thinking I'm going to get attacked."So then I will drive to the car park of this cricket pitch closer to our house and work until about 1.30 in the morning and it's pitch black outside. When I think about it now it's ridiculous. "Then I drive back at home, park in front of the house, and then, no word of a lie, continue to work outside because if I go back in, [youngest child] Bo will sense me, wake up, and then everyone will wake up, and I won't be able to work at all. "So I'll work until five in the morning. At that point think, I'm near death, and I just think I can't go on any more. So I go inside, sleep for two hours, get up at 7 to get the kids ready for school and get on with the rest of the day and being with Bo. That is where my life is at the moment." Her autobiography, entitled Lush, recounts her youth in a small village near Swansea, graduating from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art [Rada] and early stage and screen performances before her big break in the Bafta-winning sitcom Gavin and has led to countless TV and film roles, including romantic comedy Love Actually as well as regular presenting and, more recently, podcasts."It was very strange going back to the beginning. Thinking and talking of everything has been like a therapy session and quite liberating."But it does freak you out a bit as well, because I don't think I've ever analysed myself this much before. I'm an impulsive person so to think about everything so much has been quite scary." Scary but perhaps inevitable given Page reveals how three fortune tellers predicted she would become a it should be little surprise that she did not seek help from close friend and Gavin and Stacey co-creator Ruth Jones."She's so busy with her own stuff I think she'd be sick to death of me asking 'can you help me with this and that?'" The title of her autobiography, due out in September, is synonymous with her most famous character - Stacey Shipman - but Page believes Lush also sums up her own admits to crying "constantly" throughout filming of the final episode last year, then while watching with with her own family on Christmas Day and then being left a "wreck" after watching the documentary that followed."I'm just such a sentimental and emotional person anyway. My emotions are always so much on the surface that it got to the second day [of filming], I mean we were only on day two, I just started crying," she said."There was so much joy and so much laughter because we all knew this will be the last time that we're here, playing these characters in these costumes, all together, doing this story. "You think about how far all our lives have gone. I started it when I was 29, and for something to be there in the background for the whole of your life. "And then, even though, Ruth and James would say to us, that's it, it's done, you've still got that feeling in the back of your head, oh surely, in a few years, there might be something. But now knowing that's never going to happen again, it's just so sad." Additional reporting by Gwilym Hubbard.


Daily Mail
8 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Love Island star Nicole Samuel confirms new romance with rugby player with PDA-filled snap - 6 months after her split from Ciaran Davies
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