List of cultural venues in Cardiff
The following cultural venues are located in Cardiff, capital city of Wales.
Sport
Performing arts
Performing arts venues with seating capacity:
- City Hall, Cardiff (600)
 - Chapter Arts Centre (180)
 - Llanover Hall Arts Centre (100)
 - New Theatre (Cardiff) (1,144)
 - Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama 
- Dora Stoutzker Hall (400)
 - Richard Burton Theatre (182)
 - Bute Theatre (150-200)
 - Caird Studio (50)
 - Corus Recital Room (50)
 - S4C Studio (50)
 - Sir Geraint Evans Recital Room (60)
 - Weston Gallery (80)
 
 - Sherman Theatre 
- Main theatre (631)
 - Venue 2 (163)
 - Venue 3
 
 - St David's Hall 
- Main auditorium (up to 1,956)
 - Level 3 Day Stage (or "Level 3 Bar") (350 including standing)
 
 - Wales Millennium Centre (Canolfan Mileniwm Cymru) 
- Dance Space (100)
 - Donald Gordon Theatre (1,897)
 - Urdd Hall (153)
 - Weston Studio (250)
 - BBC Hoddinott Hall (350)
 
 - Roald Dahl Plass (Outdoor Arena)
 
Entertainment venues
- Cardiff University Students' Union
 - Mermaid Quay
 - Stadium Plaza
 - Cardiff International Arena 
- New Cardiff Bay Arena (proposed)
 
 - Red Dragon Centre
 - The Glee Club
 
Live music venues
- Barfly (200) - opened in 2001, closed in September 2010 [1]
 - Clwb Ifor Bach
 - Coal Exchange (1,000) - Venue closed in 2007, reopened in 2009 and closed again in 2013 because of safety concerns.[2]
 - Fuel Rock Club, Cardiff- (160) opened 2013[3]
 - The Globe (350) - opened on Albany Road, Roath, in November 2008.[4]
 - Inkspot Venue Cardiff - conference rooms, live music events[5]
 - The Moon Club, Womanby Street[6]
 - The Point (500) - closed in January 2009, following a single complaint from a neighbour about noise.[4]
 - Tiny Rebel, Cardiff- (80-100) opened 2013, function room upstairs is often used for live music
 - Tramshed (1000) - opened in October 2015 in a converted Grade II listed tram depot in Grangetown.[7]
 - Y Plas - in the Cardiff University Students' Union building in Cathays[8]
 
Gay venues
Cardiff has number of gay venues in the city, particularly in the area around Charles Street and Churchill Way. Gay-friendly venues include:
- Golden Cross - a pub featuring regular drag acts
 - Kings Cross, The Hayes - gay-friendly pub for over 35 years,[9] converted to a gastropub in 2011 [10]
 
Historic and architectural venues
This is a list of historic and architectural places and their use as a cultural venue:
- Cardiff Bay and Cardiff Barrage (has hosted open-air concerts)
 - Bute Park (used for open-air concerts and festivals)
 - Cardiff Castle (has hosted open-air concerts, a professional boxing match and small exhibitions)
 - Castell Coch (has hosted a celebrity renewal of wedding vows)
 
Museums and art galleries
Museums
Art galleries
- Albany Gallery, Roath - established 1965 [11]
 - Blackwater Gallery, Prospect Place, Cardiff [12]
 - Butetown History and Arts Centre (closed 2016), Cardiff Bay
 - Oriel Canfas, Canton - run by artists who were formerly based at the Old Library in Cardiff city centre until the late 1990s[13][14]
 - Cardiff MADE, Roath [15][16]
 - Gallery Celf, Bangor Street, Roath[17]
 - Norwegian Church Arts Centre, Cardiff Bay
 - g39 - artist run gallery, opened 1998 in the city centre and relocated to a larger space off City Road, Roath in 2011.[18]
 - tactileBOSCH, Llandaff
 - Third Floor Gallery (2010-2016), Cardiff Bay
 
Libraries
- Canton Library
 - Cathays Library
 - Central Library
 - Ely Library
 - Fairwater Library
 - Grangetown Library
 - Llandaff North Library
 - Llanedeyrn Library
 - Llanishen Library
 - Llanrumney Library
 - Penylan Library
 - Radyr Library
 - Roath Library (closed in 2014)
 - Rhiwbina Library
 - Rhydypennau Library
 - Rumney Library
 - Splott Library
 - St Mellons Library
 - Tongwynlais Library
 - Whitchurch Library
 
Places of worship
See also
References
- ^ "Surprise at closure of Cardiff music venue Barfly", BBC News, 1 September 2010. Retrieved 2015-11-22.
 - ^ "Cardiff Coal Exchange: Council to do emergency safety work", BBC News, 22 June 2013. Retrieved 2014-09-28.
 - ^ "The future of another Cardiff music venue could be under threat over a noise complaint". Wales Online. 27 March 2017. Retrieved 2023-06-17.
 - ^ a b "Cardiff needs a venue like The Globe", guardiancardiff.com, 15 April 2010. Retrieved 2014-09-28.
 - ^ "Inkspot Venue - Event Venue In Cardiff". Inkspot Venue.
 - ^ "When rock met rugby: Welsh stars as you’ve never seen them before ", Wales Online, 31 January 2015. Retrieved 2015-06-09.
 - ^ Kathryn Williams (23 October 2015) "5 gigs you shouldn't miss at Cardiff's new music venue Tramshed", Wales Online. Retrieved 2015-11-17.
 - ^ "Y Plas". www.cardiffstudents.com. Retrieved 2019-10-04.
 - ^ "Regulars campaign to save Cardiff gay pub". BBC News. 8 October 2010. Retrieved 2015-06-09.
 - ^ "Bid to save gay Cardiff pub is defeated". Wales Online. 23 February 2011. Retrieved 2015-06-09.
 - ^ "Milestone moments during 50 years at Cardiff's Albany Gallery". Wales Online. 9 November 2015. Retrieved 2023-06-17.
 - ^ "Highly Anticipated Blackwater Gallery Launches in April". Business News Wales. 28 February 2019. Retrieved 2024-04-06.
 - ^ Moore, David (30 July 2008). "Obituary - William Brown". The Guardian. Retrieved 2023-06-17.
 - ^ "Art review: coastal inspiration at Oriel Canfas". Nation.Cymru. 26 March 2023. Retrieved 2023-06-17.
 - ^ "How Cardiff M.A.D.E is running an art gallery during a pandemic". Alt.Cardiff. Cardiff School of Journalism. 2 November 2020. Retrieved 2023-06-17.
 - ^ "'Let Us Now Praise Famous Bins' – Cardiff gallery launches exhibition and legacy project". Nation.Cymru. 30 October 2022. Retrieved 2023-06-17.
 - ^ Jenny White (18 November 2023). "Major new gallery for the capital". Western Mail. Retrieved 2024-04-06.
 - ^ "The co-director of Cardiff’s g39 contemporary art gallery on why it had to relocate from the city centre", WalesOnline, 26 May 2012. Retrieved 2014-09-28.
 
