St Cadoc's Church
#4020 among destinations in the United Kingdom


Facts and practical information
St. Cadoc's Church is a Church in Wales church in Glynneath, Wales. It is located in the grounds of the now derelict Aberpergwm House for which it was an estate church. ()
St Cadoc's Church – popular in the area (distance from the attraction)
Nearby attractions include: Sgwd Henrhyd, Melincourt Falls, Porth yr Ogof, Cefn Coed Colliery Museum.
3.7 miNNatural attraction, Park, WaterfallSgwd Henrhyd, Brecon Beacons
95 min walk • Henrhyd Falls in the Brecon Beacons National Park, Wales, is the tallest waterfall in southern Wales with a drop of 90 feet. It lies on National Trust land, in the county of Powys.
3.9 miSWNature, Natural attraction, WaterfallMelincourt Falls, Neath
100 min walk • Melincourt Falls is an 80 feet high waterfall on Melin Court Brook, a left-bank tributary of the River Neath / Afon Nedd, located 1-mile south of Resolven in the county borough of Neath Port Talbot, south Wales.
5.3 miNENature, Natural attraction, CavePorth yr Ogof, Brecon Beacons
136 min walk • Porth yr Ogof is a cave located near the village of Ystradfellte, near the southern boundary of the Brecon Beacons National Park in Wales.
5.5 miWSpecialty museum, Science museum, MuseumCefn Coed Colliery Museum, Neath
141 min walk • Cefn Coed Colliery Museum is a former coal mine, now operating as a museum. It is located at Crynant near Neath in the South Wales Valleys.
4.4 miNWNature and wildlife, Park, ZooWales Ape and Monkey Sanctuary, Pen y Cae
112 min walk • Wales Ape and Monkey Sanctuary is an animal sanctuary between Caehopkin and Abercraf in Powys, Wales. It became the Wales Ape & Monkey Sanctuary in December 2008, being previously known as Cefn-yr-Erw Primate Sanctuary. The sanctuary is owned and operated by husband and wife Graham and Jan Garen.
3.4 miSELake, Archaeological siteLlyn Fawr
87 min walk • Llyn Fawr is a reservoir that occupies one of a series glacial cirques that form the northern escarpment of the South Wales Coalfield uplands, overlooking the heads of the Vale of Neath and the Cynon Valley, South Wales.
2.9 miSENature, Natural attraction, MountainCraig y Llyn
76 min walk • Craig y Llyn is a mountain situated to the south of the village of Rhigos in the Cynon Valley on the south side of the upper Vale of Neath and north of the Rhondda Valleys in South Wales; it is the highest point in the traditional county of Glamorgan, and the South Wales Valleys.
3 miNEClimbingDinas Rock, Brecon Beacons
77 min walk • Dinas Rock is a high promontory of Carboniferous Limestone which rises between the Afon Mellte and its left-bank tributary, the Afon Sychryd on the border between the county of Powys and the county borough of Neath Port Talbot in south Wales.
2.1 miENature, Natural attraction, WaterfallWaterfall Country, Neath
55 min walk • Waterfall Country is an English name often given to the Vale of Neath in South Wales. The tourist area around the head of valley has an unusually large number of publicly accessible waterfalls.
5.6 miNWNature, Natural attraction, MountainCribarth, Pen y Cae
144 min walk • Cribarth, sometimes referred to as the Sleeping Giant, is a hill in the Brecon Beacons National Park in Powys in southern Wales. The summit lies on the broken ridge at an elevation of 428 m at OS grid reference SN 831143.
4.6 miENature, Natural attraction, MountainMoel Penderyn, Brecon Beacons
117 min walk • Moel Penderyn is a hill on the edge of Penderyn village, in the Brecon Beacons National Park in the county borough of Rhondda Cynon Taff, south Wales. It also appeared on older maps as 'Y Foel Penderyn'. Its summit at 371m is marked by a trig point.