Llandudno Bay and the North Shore For most of the length of Llandudno's
North Shore there is a wide curving Victorian promenade. The road, collectively known as The Parade, has a different name for each block and it is on these parades and crescents that many of Llandudno's hotels are built. The
North Wales Theatre, Arena and Conference Centre, built in 1994, and extended in 2006 and renamed "
Venue Cymru" is located near the centre of the bay.
Llandudno Pier The
Llandudno Pier is on the
North Shore. Built in 1877, it is a Grade II
listed building. The pier was extended in 1884 in a landward direction along the side of what was the Baths Hotel (where the
Grand Hotel now stands).
Happy Valley and Haulfre Gardens The Happy Valley, a former quarry, was the gift of Lord Mostyn to the town in celebration of the
Golden Jubilee of
Queen Victoria in 1887. The area was landscaped and developed as gardens, two miniature golf courses, a putting green, a popular open-air theatre and extensive lawns. The ceremonies connected with the
Welsh National Eisteddfod were held there in 1896 and again in 1963. The gardens are listed at Grade II on the
Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales. Haulfre Gardens were developed as the private gardens to a house, Sunny Hill, in the north-west of the town. Later acquired by the council, they were opened as a public park in 1929, the opening ceremony being conducted by
David Lloyd George. The gardens are listed Grade II on the Cadw/ICOMOS register.
Marine Drive The first route round the perimeter of the Great Orme was a footpath constructed in 1858 by Reginald Cust, a trustee of the Mostyn Estate. In 1872 the Great Ormes Head Marine Drive Co. Ltd. was formed to turn the path into a carriage road. Following bankruptcy, a second company completed the road in 1878. The contractors for the scheme were Messrs Hughes, Morris, Davies, a consortium led by Richard Hughes of Madoc Street, Llandudno. The road was bought by Llandudno Urban District Council in 1897. The one-way drive starts at the foot of the Happy Valley. After about a side road leads to St Tudno's Church, the Great Orme Bronze Age Copper Mine and the summit of the Great Orme. Continuing on the Marine Drive the Great Orme Lighthouse (now a small hotel) is passed, and, shortly afterwards on the right, the Rest and Be Thankful Cafe and information centre. Below the Marine Drive at its western end is the site of the wartime Coast Artillery School (1940–1945), now a
scheduled monument.
West Shore The West Shore is a quiet beach on the estuary of the
River Conwy. It was here at Pen Morfa that
Alice Liddell (of
Alice in Wonderland fame) spent the long summer holidays of her childhood.
Mostyn Street Running behind the promenade is Mostyn Street leading to Mostyn Broadway and then Mostyn Avenue. These are the main shopping streets of Llandudno and Craig-y-Don. Mostyn Street accommodates the high street shops, the major high street banks and building societies, two churches, amusement arcades and the town's public library. The last is the starting point for the Llandudno Town Trail.
Victorian Extravaganza Every year in May
bank holiday weekend, Llandudno has a three-day Victorian Carnival and Mostyn Street becomes a funfair. Madoc Street and Gloddaeth Street and the Promenade become part of the route each day of a mid-day carnival parade. The Bodafon Farm fields become the location of a Festival of Transport. ==Llandudno Lifeboat==