Llangynidr Bridge, Brecon Beacons
#22 among attractions in Brecon Beacons
Facts and practical information
Llangynidr Bridge, also known as "Coed-yr-Ynys Bridge", is an early 18th-century bridge that crosses the River Usk to the north of Llangynidr, Powys, Wales. It carries the B4560 road towards Bwlch. ()
Brecon Beacons United Kingdom
Llangynidr Bridge – popular in the area (distance from the attraction)
Nearby attractions include: Llangorse Lake, Tretower Court, Bear Hotel, Tretower Castle.
- 4 miNFishing and boating in a historic setting
Llangorse Lake, Brecon Beacons
103 min walk • Llangorse Lake is the largest natural lake in Mid and South Wales, and is situated in the Brecon Beacons National Park, near the town of Brecon and the village of Llangors.
- 2.2 miEForts and castles, Museum, History museum
Tretower Court, Brecon Beacons
56 min walk • Tretower Court is a medieval fortified manor house in Wales, situated in the village of Tretower, near Crickhowell in modern-day Powys, previously within the historical county of Breconshire or Brecknockshire.
- 4.2 miENightlife
Bear Hotel, Crickhowell
108 min walk • The Bear Hotel, formerly the White Bear, stands on Beaufort Street, Crickhowell, Powys, Wales. A coaching inn from the mid 18th century, the building has older origins from the 17th and 15th centuries. It is a Grade II* listed building.
- 2.2 miEForts and castles
Tretower Castle, Crickhowell
56 min walk • Tretower Castle is a Grade I-listed ruined castle in the village of Tretower in the county of Powys, Wales. It was built around the beginning of the twelfth century as a motte and bailey castle and this was probably replaced mid-century by a stone shell keep.
- 4.1 miEBridge
Crickhowell Bridge, Crickhowell
104 min walk • Crickhowell Bridge is an 18th-century bridge that spans the River Usk in Crickhowell, Powys, Wales. The main A4077 road to Gilwern crosses it. The bridge is claimed to be the longest stone bridge in Wales at over 128 metres.
- 4.1 miEChurch
St Edmund's Church, Crickhowell
106 min walk • St Edmund's Church is located in Crickhowell, in southeastern Powys, Wales. Built in the early 14th century, the church is dedicated to Saint Edmund the king and martyr. It has been known by this name from its establishment in 1303. In a will dated 1576 in the register office at Brecon, it is termed the parish of Saint Edmund.
- 4.2 miNENature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Pen Allt-mawr, Brecon Beacons
108 min walk • Pen Allt-mawr is a 719 metres high subsidiary summit of Waun Fach and the third highest peak in the Black Mountains in south-eastern Wales.
- 1.7 miNForts and castles
Blaenllynfi Castle, Brecon Beacons
43 min walk • Blaenllynfi Castle is a privately owned ruinous stone castle near the village of Bwlch in southern Powys, Wales. It was probably built in the early thirteenth century.
- 2.4 miWNature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Tor y Foel, Brecon Beacons
61 min walk • Tor y Foel is a hill in the Brecon Beacons National Park in the county of Powys in Wales. It is located on the eastern flank of Talybont Reservoir, and the summit at 551m is marked by a small cairn.
- 3.4 miSWNature, Natural attraction, Cave
Chartist Cave, Brecon Beacons
87 min walk • Chartist Cave is a culturally significant cave on Mynydd Llangynidr in southern Powys, Wales. The entrance is a broad arch formed of Twrch Sandstone which overlies the Carboniferous Limestone immediately beneath.
- 4 miNNature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Mynydd Llangorse, Brecon Beacons
102 min walk • Mynydd Llangorse is a hill on the western edge of the Black Mountains in the Brecon Beacons National Park in Powys, south Wales. It lies two miles east of Llangors and its lake and 5 miles south of Talgarth. Its summit at 515m overtops the location 600m to the south at which a trig point is sited by 9m.