52 Mostyn Avenue

Llandudno LL30 1DZ

07956 003115

Mobile Number

01492 580707

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North Wales Attractions

Your dream holiday is here
from just £440 for 7 days

For theatre, big bands & concerts, films, conferences & and private events, Venue Cymru is here for you.

Willow Lodge is conveniently located a short stroll away from Venue Cymru. Why not visit the website and take in a show whilst you holiday in North Wales.

Bodnant Garden is one of the most beautiful gardens in the UK, covering some 80 acres and situated above the River Conwy on ground sloping towards the west and looking across the valley towards the Snowdonia range.

Great Orme Tramway

The Great Orme Tramway has been delighting visitors since it opened on July 31st 1902. An engineering marvel of its age, it’s still the only cable-hauled tramway still operating on British public roads….
Llandudno, North Wales

GreenWood Forest Park

Voted Best Family Attraction in North Wales for 4 years running, days out don’t get much better than this! GreenWood Forest Park is set in 17 magical acres, where you will discover bags of woodland adventure, awesome attractions and forest family fun.

Conwy Valley Railway

The Conwy Valley Railway Museum was originally formed by Alan Pratt in the early 70s with a small exhibition in one of the standard gauge bogie coaches. And the facility of a MK1 coach as a small Café providing tea, coffee and biscuits. The carriages being left on a section of one of the sidings in the old goods yard of Betws y Coed station.
Conwy Valley Railway

Ffestiniog & Welsh Highland Railways

The Ffestiniog Railway is the oldest independent railway company in the World – being founded by an Act of Parliament in 1832.

The railway was built as a gravity and horse drawn line to transport slate from the quarries in the mountains around Blaenau Ffestiniog. As the slate industry flourished, so did the railway and the town of Porthmadog. Slates from Blaenau Ffestiniog were exported to ports all over the globe – many in ships built in Porthmadog.

Fest-Railway

Anglesey Sea Zoo

There’s amazing marine life to see at the biggest aquarium in Wales! Enter an eerie shipwreck brimming with Conger Eels then dare to walk the Shark Pool grids and see a Kelp Forest full of huge fishes! With over 150 native species from the familiar to the rare and strange, there’s something for everyone!

Anglesey-Sea-Zoo

Portmeirion Village and Gardens

Portmeirion village and gardens are near Porthmadog on a private peninsula off the Snowdonia coast. There are shops, restaurants, gardens and beaches and 70 acres of woodland walks. The village was built by Welsh architect Sir Clough Williams-Ellis from 1925 to 1972. The village was used as the location for the 1960s cult television series The Prisoner.

The village has many colourful shops and restaurants including Castell Deudraeth (lunch includes free village entry), The Hotel Portmeirion (table d’hote menu), The Terrace Self-Service Restaurant, Cadwalader’s Ice Cream Cafe and Caffi Glas pizza restaurant. All the cottages in the village are let as suites and rooms as part of the Hotel Portmeirion.

Portmeirion_Village

Snowdon - Yr Wyddfa

Snowdon (Welsh: Yr Wyddfa, pronounced is the highest mountain in Wales, at an altitude of 1,085 metres (3,560 ft) above sea level, and the highest point in the British Isles outside Scotland. It is located in Snowdonia National Park in Gwynedd, and has been described as “probably the busiest mountain in Britain”.It is designated as a national nature reserve for its rare flora and fauna.

Snowdon boasts some of the best views in Britain, and the summit can be reached by a number of well-known paths. The summit can also be reached on the Snowdon Mountain Railway, a rack and pinion railway opened in 1896 which carries passengers the 4.7 miles (7.6 km) from Llanberis to the summit station. The summit also houses a visitor centre called Hafod Eryri, built in 2006 to replace one built in the 1930s.