Cold Knap
Cold Knap | |
---|---|
District of Barry | |
Cold Knap lake | |
Cold Knap Location in Barry | |
Coordinates: 51°23′14″N 3°17′25″W | |
Country | United Kingdom |
Region | Wales |
County | Vale of Glamorgan |
Town | Barry |
Time zone | UTC+0 (GMT) |
Cold Knap is a district of Barry in South Wales.
Amenities
Cold Knap is a coastal pebble beach (with some sand at low tide),[1] approximately a mile west of the sandy beach at Barry Island, which attracts visitors during the summer months. It extends generally westwards towards Porthkerry from Cold Knap Point.[2] It was founded by the Romans who used it as a port, and the remains of a Roman building here are now a scheduled monument.[3]
Attractions include a lake shaped like a Welsh harp and a skate park. There was previously an outdoor swimming pool, but this has now been closed and filled in, and the area turned into a tourist trail. There was a campaign to have the lido rebuilt during 2014 but an enthusiastic online campaign (including a Facebook campaign group ("Rebuild the Knap Lido") has not been successful, despite a number of celebrity endorsements (including local BBC weatherman Derek Brockway).[4]
Cold Knap Lake is the title and subject of a poem by Gillian Clarke, which has been included in an English literature GCSE syllabus in England.
Cold Knap Point is the site of a sewage pumping station serving Barry.[5]
It was also the location of a case in English contract law - Chapelton v. Barry UDC [1940] 1 KB 532 - where a man's deckchair collapsed.
References
- Cold Knap beach at beachguide.wales Accessed 27 June 2017
- Map showing Cold Knap beach at streetmap.co.uk Accessed 27 June 2017
- 'Roman building remains, Cold Knap, Barry' at historypoints.org Accessed 27 June 2017
- Sharon Harris: 'Weatherman pools support for Lido campaign', 6 August 2014, at barryanddistrictnews.co.uk Accessed 27 June 2017
- See file: '3 The Knap to Watch House Beach.pdf', including "...a strategically important sewage pumping station that serves Barry", at www.southwalescoast.org Accessed 27 June 2017