Work planned for the forthcoming week on the town's 2020 project is:
- Paving outside the Town Hall
- Begin paving on the west side of the bridge
- Drainage works on the south side of Mill Street
Latest events and comments from the town of Llangollen in Denbighshire, North Wales, UK. EMAIL: llanblogger@gmail.com
Work planned for the forthcoming week on the town's 2020 project is:
The following local roadworks alert has been issued by one.network:
25 April - 27 April Delays likely - Traffic
control (two-way signals) Description:
LAY NEW GAS 5M PUBLIC... Works location:
OUTSIDE NUMBER 20 Public facing description:
Wales & West Utilities Ltd has not assigned a specific description to
this Works. Please note: Works Descriptions are not published by Wales &
West Utilities Ltd. Responsibility for works:
Wales & West Utilities Ltd Current status:
Planned work about to start Works reference: XY254004000173258 |
An outdoor exhibition focusing on the ‘Custodians’ of the Dee Valley landscape is on display in the area.
As part of Our Picturesque Landscape, the National Lottery Heritage Funded project in the Dee Valley, artists in residence Jessica and Philip Hatcher-Moore have interviewed and photographed local caretakers of the landscape.
Jessica has written vignettes about each person while Philip has taken portraits of them. These have been combined on exhibition boards to be displayed in the landscape.
Five of these boards were displayed at Wenffrwd Nature Reserve throughout October 2021 and now the full exhibition of ten boards is on display along the footpath between Berwyn station and the Chain Bridge, Llangollen.
The railway would also like to feature the exhibition at their launch event in Corwen when the station opens formally later in the year.
The exhibition will be displayed at other locations within the Dee Valley in the coming months. This partnership working will allow more people, both locals and visitors to the area, to engage with the images and stories curated by the Hatcher-Moores during their residency.
Jessica said: “I think wherever you live there is going to be an extraordinary cast of characters around you, but that feels particularly true here in the Dee Valley. As our stories show, the dramatic landscape of the area has been inspiring people for centuries, and it’s been such a joy to explore the impact it continues to have on people today.
“The biggest thing that emerged for me from these stories is how the community spirit is very much still alive in the Dee Valley – and how the landscape, with its rich social and natural history, supports it.
“We are very hugely grateful to the Our Picturesque Landscape and National Lottery Heritage Fund for giving us the opportunity to explore these stories."
“Exhibiting these photographs outdoors, in the landscape in which they were shot, adds another dimension to the work, with the interplay of light and shadows dancing across the images,” said photographer Philip Hatcher-Moore who specialises in outdoor installations of his work.
Phil Coles, Chairman Llangollen Railway Trust, said: “Llangollen Railway is very pleased to be helping the local AONB in this project and we hope this helps tourists to the area to understand more about the beautiful Dee Valley."
Denbighshire County Council has given llanblogger a progress report on the town's ongoing 2020 Project, explaining that it is "within budget" and due to finish by the end of next month.
There has been speculation locally that the scheme to widen pavements on Castle Street along with other modifications to the traffic system was running over budget and also behind schedule.
When llanblogger posed these questions to the council, a spokesperson responded: “The Llangollen 2020 Improvement project, which started in October, is being undertaken by Denbighshire County Council in partnership with Welsh Government and Transport for Wales.
“The project
is within budget and due to be completed by the end of May.
“The scheme
was developed following extensive consultation with the local community, local
county councillors and Llangollen Town Council and aims to improve pedestrian
access to the town as well as improving the flow of vehicles.
“This work
provides more space for pedestrians and improved pedestrian crossing facilities
making it easier for pedestrians to walk around the town centre, while upgraded
traffic signals will improve the flow of vehicles.”
When work on the scheme began last October, the council said that it would take up to six months to complete.
* The new High Sheriff of Clwyd, Zoë Henderson, at her Declaration at Nantclwyd y Dre, in Ruthin.
The new High Sheriff of Clwyd has pledged to work with schools across North East Wales to help keep young people on the straight and narrow.
Zoë Henderson, 60, a former executive with the giant US-based Dow
Chemical Corporation, has hit the ground running by arranging a series of
meetings with head teachers at the area’s secondary schools.
She held the Declaration to begin her year in office at historic 15th
century Nantclwyd y Dre, in her home town of Ruthin.
Her own education began at Llanbedr village school in the Vale of Clwyd
before going on to Ysgol Brynhyfryd in Ruthin and she joined Dow after
graduating from Wye College, part of London University, with a degree in
Agricultural Economics.
She spent many years in sales and marketing roles across the USA and
latterly back in Europe before stepping down from Dow, buying the family
farmhouse, historic Caerfallen near Ruthin, from her parents and restoring it.
Zoë said: “I plan to take a particular interest in what causes young
people to get into trouble with the law and what can be done to prevent this.
“The last thing you want is for a child in their teens looking forward
to a wonderful life in the world of work to then see that future blighted by
involvement in some sort of crime.
“I was very inspired recently by a visit to my old school, Brynhyfryd,
to discuss local issues and I’m looking forward to visiting other Conwy,
Denbighshire, Flintshire and Wrexham schools to discuss the issues faced by
young people.”
She succeeds former
Airbus UK executive Steve Thomas, from St Asaph, but the origins of the office date back to Saxon times when the ‘Shire Reeve’
was responsible to the king for the maintenance of law and order within the
shire, or county, and for the collection and return of taxes due to the Crown.
The Queen appoints the high sheriff of each county of England
and Wales by ‘pricking the vellum’, a custom dating back to the reign of
Elizabeth I who signified assent by piercing the vellum or parchment by each
name and signing the document.
It was in the reign of Elizabeth I that Zoë’s home at Caerfallen was built as the
residence of Robert Turbridge, an earlier royal appointment as Baron Exchequer
of North Wales with the job of collecting the taxes in recognition of his
“constant diligence about the Queen’s affairs in said counties.”
Her duties as High Sheriff will also include supporting the
Lord Lieutenant, Henry Fetherstonhaugh, in the event of any Royal visits to
North East Wales and to sitting with and supporting judges and magistrates.
Her involvement in legal affairs will be supported by the
Under-Sheriff of Clwyd, Sarah Noton, Managing Director of North Wales and
Cheshire law firm Swayne Johnson.
Zoë added: “The
official charity of High Sheriffs is Crimebeat and Crimebeat North Wales
celebrates 20 years this year and in that time has issued grants worth more
than £130,000 to projects mostly run by young people and aimed at cutting
crime, supporting the victims of crime and improving life in communities across
North Wales.
“I want to continue that work and also from my business background ask
if we can promote that work better and do some things differently which might
be more effective.
“I think I can do that and it gives me a real focus on ensuring that
Crimebeat is fit for the future and for the differing needs of different parts
of North Wales.”
Zoë, a keen horsewoman who has ridden all her life
including during her time in the USA where she lived in Indiana in the Mid
West, has kept busy since leaving Dow, first on the Agricultural and
Horticultural Development Board and more recently on the Board of Natural
Resources Wales as well as doing business consultancy work.
She has also been gradually restoring Grade Two Star-listed
Caerfallen and its buildings, including a 16th century barn which is
now a beautifully appointed holiday property.
* For more information on the office of High Sheriff of Clwyd go to https://highsheriffs.com/clwyd/ and for the work of Crimebeat North Wales go to http://www.crimebeatnorthwales.co.uk/
The first acts have been announced for The Collen Players' next variety and music hall show.
Due to be held in St Collen's Community Hall on Friday May 6, The Good Old Days will transport the audience back in time to a place where a selection of acts will recreate the rumbustious Victorian music hall of the naughty 1890s.
Denbighshire Count Council has announced that night works are due to take place in Llangollen as part of the town’s major public realm improvement project.
Work to re-surface
Castle Street from Market Street junction up to and including the Mill
Street/Abbey Road junction will take place between May 3 and May 20, excluding
weekends, between 6pm to 12am, Monday to Friday.
The re-surfacing works have to be conducted under a road closure, says the council.
It explains: "Consideration was given to
other options, such as undertaking the work during the day or conducting a
shorter series of night time closures.
"However, it was
determined these options would not be feasible for safety reasons and because,
in the case of the shorter series of night time works, they would cause more
disturbance to residents.
"The council would
like to thank residents for their understanding during this period."