Central Square, Cardiff The current headquarters of BBC Cymru Wales is
New Broadcasting House, based in Cardiff's
Central Square in the heart of the city. It opened in 2019, with broadcasting starting in 2020. The new building is the base for almost all BBC Cymru Wales staff, and is purpose built to house radio and TV production teams. It is the home of BBC Cymru Wales's news services, in English and Welsh,
Wales Today,
BBC Radio Wales and
BBC Radio Cymru, as well as production teams for UK-wide programming and programmes commissioned by S4C. Its location was decided in June 2014, on the site of the former
Cardiff Central bus station. It can house up to 1,000 staff, with around half the floor space of its former Llandaff base and with 70% less studio space. Fewer studios were needed in the new headquarters partly as a result of the new purpose build facilities for drama and BBC National Orchestra of Wales in Cardiff Bay. Staff started to move into the new headquarters in October 2019,
Studios in Cardiff Bay (Roath Lock and Hoddinott Hall) studio complex.The expansion of BBC Cymru Wales' drama productions in recent years has resulted in investment for new studios. Drama production for BBC Cymru Wales is currently based at
Roath Lock studios in Cardiff Bay. The main year-round productions on site include
Doctor Who and
Casualty, both made for
BBC One, and , which BBC Cymru Wales produces on behalf of
S4C. In the 2000s, as a temporary measure to generate extra capacity, BBC Wales invested into
Upper Boat Studios in
Pontypridd to house several productions, notable centred around the 2005 revival of
Doctor Who and its sister productions
Torchwood and
The Sarah Jane Adventures. Despite the investment in Upper Boat, the studio complex soon became too small to house new productions being moved to the BBC Nations. As part of this decision, it was decided in March 2009 that BBC productions
Casualty and
Crimewatch were to relocate from their former homes at BBC Bristol network production unit to
Cardiff. and construction began in June 2010 with the building topping out in February 2011. Production began at the site in autumn 2011 As a result, moved from the Llandaff studios and
Doctor Who moved from Upper Boat studios to the new complex, with
Casualty joining them at the site. Despite being designed to house them, the site never housed the
Sarah Jane Adventures, following the death of main actress
Elisabeth Sladen in 2011, or
Upstairs Downstairs, following the series' cancellation. BBC National Orchestra of Wales operated from a purpose-built orchestra studio, Studio 1, in Broadcasting House from 1966 to 2008. They then moved to new purpose built facilities at
BBC Hoddinott Hall in January 2009, as part of the
Wales Millennium Centre campus.
Broadcasting House, Llandaff Until 2020, BBC Cymru Wales's headquarters were at
Broadcasting House,
Llandaff,
Cardiff. It was the first time that all of BBC Cymru Wales's departments within Cardiff were located on one site. Broadcasting House was built next to Baynton House which housed all of the BBC Wales' operations from 1952 until construction was finished. Baynton House remained in use by the BBC until 1975 when it was demolished to make way for the E-Block extension. Previously, the BBC in Wales had been located in the converted Broadway Methodist Chapel on Broadway in Roath, Cardiff from 1955, and in nearby premises on Stacey Road in Roath, Cardiff from 1959. A temporary broadcasting centre was set up on the banks of the
River Taff, in 1958 to cover the Empire Games. While these studios played host to drama, entertainment and regional programmes, the site was still not ideal. The site only held two studios, both located in the church, and the ability to broadcast film was not installed on the site for several years; film played into programmes from a telecine machine in Bristol or London and film processing for news was carried out by a firm called Park Pictures in Cardiff until BBC processing was installed in Stacey Road.
Studios outside of Cardiff BBC Cymru Wales's main studios outside of Cardiff are based in Bangor, Gwynedd, and are home to around 50 staff. Much of BBC Radio Cymru's daytime output is broadcast from here. Across Wales, there are also a number of properties that the BBC owns are local radio studios. These are primarily used as contributor studios, where interviewees or reporters can join a radio programme from an ISDN line, with the presenter remaining in the main studio in Cardiff or Bangor. These studios are located in
Aberystwyth,
Carmarthen,
Newtown,
Penrhyndeudraeth,
Swansea and
Wrexham. ==Television productions==