Skatepark








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Paddling Pool







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Date: 12 December 2025
Location: Penmaenmawr 53.271646, -3.922087
🔗 Penmaenmawr Promenade (GeoTopoi, 2010)








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Date: 12 December 2025
Location: Penmaenmawr 53.271646, -3.922087
🔗 Penmaenmawr Promenade (GeoTopoi, 2010)






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Date: 12 December 2025
Location: Penmaenmawr 53.270911, -3.924074
🔗 Penmaenmawr Promenade (GeoTopoi, 2010)






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Date: 22 November 2025
Location:
Benllech, Anglesey
53.318323, -4.216504

Date: 15 November 2025
Location: Parc Penrhyn Coast Path, Bangor, Wales 53.236499, -4.091209
The derelict bath house is located at the end of an overgrown, 120-metre-long jetty on the northern edge of the Penrhyn Estate between Abercegin and Aberogwen.
The 18th-century building, which featured hot and cold sea-water baths, was designed by architect Benjamin Wyatt (1775‒1852).
🔗 The bath house in 2011 (GeoTopoi)
🔗 Ruins of Penrhyn marine bath, Bangor (History Points)

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Date: 15 November 2025
Location: Ogwen Bank, Bethesda 53.168159, -4.056999
On the morning after Storm Claudia.

Date: 8 November 2025
Location: Bangor Pier 53.240368, -4.125838



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Date: 1 November 2025
Location: Penrhyn Castle, Bangor 53.225554, -4.098500









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Apologies for the “photoshopped” appearance of the final three – the phone camera seems to have HDR-ified those ones big time 😉



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Date: 12 October 2025
Location: Penrhyn Castle, Bangor 53.226803, -4.095718
Date: 21 September 2025
Location: Dyrham, South Gloucestershire 51.480156, -2.372464
Dyrham Park mansion was built by William Blathwayt (c. 1649‒1717), Secretary at War to King William III. The house remained in the Blathwayt family until being acquired by the National Trust in 1961, followed by its surrounding parkland in 1976.


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Date: 21 September 2025
Location: Park Street, Totterdown, Bristol 51.441511, -2.572928



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Date: 21 September 2025
Location: Temple Meads railway station, Bristol 51.449332, -2.582225
Isambard Kingdom Brunel (1806‒1859)
This statue of the great engineer, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, which was originally presented to Bristol by the Bristol and West Building Society, was created by John Doubleday and first unveiled in the city on 26th May 1982.
It was then moved from its original site at Broad Quay in 2006, the bicentenary of Brunel's birth and was most recently located outside the modern offices of Osborne Clarke in Temple Quay.
Not only does the statue now front Brunel's iconic 1840 station building at Bristol Temple Meads, but it is bookended by another statue of Brunel, by the same artist, located at Paddington Station at the Eastern end of his great railway.
— Information panel

Date: 20 September 2025
Location: Arnolfini, Narrow Quay, Bristol 51.449315, -2.597233











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Date: 20 September 2025
Location: Millennium Square, Bristol 51.450131, -2.600284
Millennium Square was built in the late 1990s as part of a major regeneration project part funded by the National Lottery’s Millennium Commission. The development included the interactive science museum, We The Curious (originally named @Bristol).
The spherical planetarium, clad in mirrored tiles, was built as part of the initial We The Curious development.
The water feature installation, Aquarena, consists of terraced cascades and fountain walls and was designed by artist William Pye.












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Date: 20 September 2025
Location: College Green, Bristol 51.451633, -2.600328



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Date: 20 September 2025
Location: Park Street, Bristol 51.454412, -2.602621











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Date: 20 September 2025
Location: Bristol University, Queens Road, Bristol 51.455968, -2.604621
The Wills Memorial Building, commissioned by the Wills family and designed by Sir George Oatley, was completed in 1925 as a memorial to Henry Overton Wills III, the university’s first Chancellor. The building houses the Schools of Law and Earth Sciences and is the main venue for graduation ceremonies.
There is some controversy around the name of the building, given that the Wills family’s enormous wealth was predominantly derived from trading in tobacco from American slave plantations.




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Date: 20 September 2025
Location: Bristol University, Tyndall Avenue / St Michael’s Hill, Bristol 51.458729, -2.601026
The 13,500 sqm Life Sciences was designed by architects Sheppard Robson and opened in 2014. It’s west-facing wing, housing the laboratory spaces, features an undulating wall of anodised aluminium.