Both the mill and the village of Drefach Felindre are a
national heritage site. Launched as the Museum of the Welsh Woollen Industry in 1976, it reopened in March 2004 as the National Wool Museum following a two-year, £2 million refit partly funded by the
Heritage Lottery Fund. The restoration work includes a glass roofed courtyard and a new gallery which displays aspects of the National Flat Textile collection. As well as historic
machinery, a raised walkway gives a view of textiles in production at Melin Teifi, the site's commercial woollen mill. In 2005 a Research and Collections Centre opened which includes a room dedicated to hands-on learning opportunities. The renovation was part of a £40m museum strategy for Wales and opened by
National Assembly for Wales Culture Minister
Alun Pugh. The strategy embraces three existing site-specific museums; the National Wool Museum, the
National Slate Museum at
Llanberis;
Big Pit National Coal Museum in
Blaenavon; and development of the new
National Waterfront Museum in
Swansea. ==References==