Local Info

Swansea has experienced dramatic economic growth that has been generated by a structured investment programme, enhancing the City and its surrounds. shopping.jpg

It has has a population of 230,000 people including 12,000 students with two universities and several colleges. Home to the £30million National Waterfront Museum, the £9million Wales National Pool - the only 50 metre pool in Wales,and the new £27million state-of-the-art Liberty Stadium home to Swansea City Football Club and the Ospreys regional rugby team.  The city’s newest attraction, launched in early 2008, is the cutting edge and contemporary £32million leisure centre.
Recent regeneration activity at the 40ha SA1 Swansea Waterfront adjacent to the swansea bay.jpgCity Centre has raised the profile of Swansea considerably. The Swansea Enterprise Park is now well established. It is now supplemented by the thriving 470 acres of Swansea Vale, which is one of the most significant development and investment opportunities in the City's history. A Joint Venture between the City and County of Swansea and the Welsh Assembly Government, the award-winning development provides a prestigious location for residential and business use. 

Anyone looking to improve their quality of life will be attracted to Swansea, a modern and cosmopolitan city with numerous attractions for those who want to live life to the full.

Swansea University of Wales is the largest institution within the University of Wales. Its attractive coastal location and accessibility to students from outside Wales already made the university a natural alternative to the Welsh capital for thousands of applicants — so much so that in 2005 in a poll of 10,000 students, Swansea won The Times Higher Education Supplement’s inaugural award for the best student experience in the UK. The university also did well in both of the first two national student satisfaction surveys, with education, sports science, European languages and geography producing the best results last year.

 

HOW IT RATES
Times Online, July 2007

"An ugly, lovely town”, to quote its famous son, Dylan Thomas, Swansea is set in the County of Swansea, which includes the unspoilt Gower Peninsula. The city has an impressive industrial pedigree: in 1306 the docks were established for shipbuilding, and during the Industrial Revolution the city was at the heart of the copper-smelting trade. The Luftwaffe “remodelled” Swansea in the Second World War. It became a city in 1969; the recently regenerated dock areas are a source of local pride.

WHAT’S NEW

Swansea Waterfront is at the forefront of the city’s regeneration; in September Knight Frank (029-2044 0136) will be launching its Harbour Square development. One, two and three-bedroom flats are available, priced from £130,000.

QUALITY OF LIFE

Pretty good. Swansea is close to great beaches that are famed for their beauty (Rhossili Bay is perhaps the most famous). Coastal paths allow great views of the Gower Peninsula, the first area of the UK to be designated an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. North of the city there is some stunning countryside with mountain panoramas.

TRAVEL

The M4 links Swansea with Cardiff and London. Great Western Trains has a regular service to Paddington (the journey takes about three hours). A ferry service to Cork leaves six times a week.

POPULATION

2005 figures put the population of the city and county at 226,400, the third highest in Wales.

SMARTEST STREETS

The western side of the city, including the waterfront, is as expensive as anywhere in Wales. Sketty and Mumbles are the best of the surrounding villages.

BEST RESTAURANTS

Take your pick. Fairyhill on the Gower is an 18th-century hotel with 24 acres of grounds and top-notch cuisine. The always popular Eleo’s Brasserie in Swansea allows you to choose your own cut of meat or fish, then hand it over for the chef to cook.

TOP NIGHTLIFE

The largest of the city’s theatres is The Grand, which is showing Musical pulsating weekend bar scene centres around Wind Street and Kingsway. The best of the Wind Street bars are Lloyds Bar and The Reflex 80's Bar. For night owls, wander down Kingsway for clubs such as Top Banana and Klub Kaos. Kenbukan caters for insomniacs, closing at 10am.

EDUCATION

Swarms of students from Swansea University fill the city. The oldest school is Bishop Gore, the most famous of the independents is Ffynone House. Ysgol Gyfun Gymraeg Bryn Tawe is one of three Welsh schools in Swansea and also one of the leading schools in the country.

WORKING LIFE

The public sector leads the way with 36.6 per cent. The hotel and restaurant business comes next with 24.8 per cent. Just over a quarter of Swansea’s working population are employed part-time.

UPSIDE

Star-spotters might, if they are lucky, occasionally get a glimpse of local girl Catherine Zeta-Jones – or even Michael Douglas (see Montenegro, page 14). Mumbles, a former fishing village turned resort, is a popular destination. The Gower attracts legions of artists and is right on your doorstep.

DOWNSIDE

The three-day visit from the Luftwaffe in 1941 has left historic buildings thin on the ground. The nightlife may be good for students, but it can be limited for anyone on the wrong side of 30.

£138,700 The average property price in Swansea
Source: Hometrack

6% The increase in property prices in Swansea over the past year
Source: Halifax

117% The increase in property prices in Swansea over the past five years
Source: Halifax

14.5% The percentage of the Swansea population who speak Welsh
Source: Office for National Statistics


(City and County of Swansea)  Other Local Images below.

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 three cliffs.jpg  marina sunset.jpg  build.jpg