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Llandudno railway station

DfT Category E stationsFormer London and North Western Railway stationsLlandudnoRailway stations in Conwy County BoroughRailway stations in Great Britain opened in 1858
Railway stations served by Transport for Wales RailUse British English from January 2017
Llandudno Station Wyrdlight 814226
Llandudno Station Wyrdlight 814226

Llandudno railway station serves the seaside town of Llandudno in North Wales. It is the terminus of a 3 miles (4.8 km) long branch line from Llandudno Junction on the North Wales Coast Line, between Crewe and Holyhead. The station is managed by Transport for Wales Rail, who operate all trains serving it. Llandudno Victoria station, the lower terminus of the Great Orme Tramway, is a 15-minute walk from the main station.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Llandudno railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Llandudno railway station
Vaughan Street,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Llandudno railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.321 ° E -3.827 °
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Address

Nevill

Vaughan Street
LL30 1AB , Craig-y-don
Wales, United Kingdom
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Llandudno Station Wyrdlight 814226
Llandudno Station Wyrdlight 814226
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Nearby Places

Ysgol John Bright

Ysgol John Bright is a secondary school on Maesdu Road, Llandudno in Conwy County Borough, Wales. It was founded with money and support from the social reformer John Bright, whose son died in Llandudno in 1864. Until 1969 the school was a selective grammar school known as John Bright Grammar School (JBGS). It reopened in September 1969 as a comprehensive and with a new name – Ysgol John Bright. ("Ysgol" is Welsh for "school") The school serves the state secondary education sector in the Llandudno area and has around 1200 pupils. The current headteacher is Hywel Parry. The first John Bright school first opened in February 1896 in temporary premises – now the Risboro Hotel. It was bought for £567 and had 62 pupils. By 1905, there were nearly 80 pupils and 5 teachers. It had five classrooms and specialist rooms for cookery, music, art and woodwork, physics and science. The headmaster was J.M. Archer-Thomson, a leading Welsh mountaineer. The school moved to a new site on Oxford Road in 1907 and remained on that site until 2004. The Oxford Road buildings were demolished in 2004 and the site was redeveloped as an Asda store. It has not been revealed how much Asda paid for the site. New school buildings on Maesdu Road were opened in September 2004. They were built as part of a PFI project and a facilities management company handles caretaking, cleaning and catering. The cost was £20,000,000. As the new site had previously been a landfill and gasworks, the move was the subject of some controversy.