Central Square, Cardiff
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Sgwâr Canolog | |
Panoramic view of Central Square in 2023 | |
![]() Interactive map of Central Square | |
| Type | Pedestrian only |
|---|---|
| Addresses | 1–6 Central Square |
| Location | Cardiff |
| Postal code | CF10 |
| Nearest Railway station | Cardiff Central |
| Coordinates | 51°28′34″N 3°10′43″W / 51.4762°N 3.1787°W |
| Other | |
| Designer | Foster and Partners (Gerard Evenden) |
| Website | centralsquarecardiff |
Central Square (Welsh: Sgwâr Canolog) is a large public space in Cardiff, Wales, adjacent to Cardiff Central railway station and included Cardiff Central bus station between 1954 and 2015. It was redeveloped and extended in the late 2010s and early 2020s.

Until the 1930s an area of terraced housing, churches and shops, named Temperance Town, occupied the current site of Central Square. As a result, due to its legal history, Central Square is now one of a few areas in Cardiff designated an alcohol control zone, allowing the police to confiscate alcohol.[1]
Between 1932 and 1934, the Great Western Railway replaced the original 1850s station building (also designed by their architect's department) with a new Art Deco building faced in Portland stone, enclosing a booking hall with noted Art Deco light fittings, all topped by a clock cupola.[2] The Great Western Railway has its full name carved onto the façade (larger than the name of the station). During the new station's planning and construction, the GWR made representations to Cardiff Corporation to improve the immediate area. As a result, from 1930 the Corporation started to plan the removal of the adjacent working-class district, Temperance Town.[3]
The streets of Temperance Town were demolished in 1937, although the intervention of World War II halted redevelopment plans until after the war.[4] A new bus station was opened in 1954, and a new office building, Marland House, was constructed to the east of the bus station.[4]

In 1999 a 4-metre-high (13 ft) sculpture, Cader Idris (named after the mountain Cadair Idris) was erected in Central Square. However, within six months it was reportedly described as a "dirty disgrace"[5] and (in 2008) it was reportedly attracting undesirables to congregate on it.[1] It was later dismantled and relocated to Cardiff Bay Wetlands Reserve.[6]
