Western Mail

Homes set for historic civic Swansea site

- SION BARRY Business editor newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

Work has started to breathe new life into a historic Swansea location which was previously a work base for hundreds of council staff.

Cross Hands-based Enzo’s Homes has moved constructi­on workers on to the site of Penllergae­r’s former Lliw Valley Civic Centre. They will build 80 homes, with a show home expected to be open by mid-November and the project completed in late 2020.

The site was once home to renowned botanist and photograph­y pioneer John Dillwyn Llewelyn.

Planning permission from Swansea Council was approved early this year, as well as a landscape management plan from Enzo’s Homes. It details all existing trees and hedgerows, identifyin­g which will remain and how they will be protected during constructi­on.

The company will work with the council and an archaeolog­ist to treat the site’s heritage with sensitivit­y.

The site’s Equatorial Observator­y will remain in the centre of a large village green-style area at the heart of the developmen­t.

Swansea Council has sold the site to Enzo’s Homes as it continues to review buildings and land in its ownership. Proceeds from such sales are reinvested back into capital projects in areas such as schools, highways and the city centre.

Constructi­on will follow the demolition of the former civic centre, of which only the footings remain. Measuring about 70,000 sq ft, it opened for the former Lliw Valley Borough Council in 1982 on part of a 14.58-acre site.

Swansea Council’s cabinet member for business transforma­tion and performanc­e, Clive Lloyd, said: “We sold this site as we look to become more costeffect­ive than ever before as a council.

“I’m pleased that it is now in the hands of a local business – this helps keep money in the local economy.

“The scheme will bring additional housing to Penllergae­r and will complement the wonderful work being done by the Penllergar­e Trust to reinvigora­te Penllergar­e Valley Woods.”

Enzo Sauro, of Enzo’s Homes, said: “The interest in the developmen­t has been phenomenal and we’re excited about transformi­ng it.”

The homes being planned range from three-bedroom to five-bedroom properties. Three of the fivebedroo­m homes will replicate the appearance of the mansion house where John Dillwyn Llewelyn lived in the 19th century with this family.

Dillywn Llewelyn had the observator­y built on the estate as a 16th-birthday present for his daughter Thereza in 1851. It was from the observator­y that they took one of the first photograph­s of the moon.

 ??  ?? > An artist’s impression of Enzo’s Homes’ developmen­t at Penllergae­r
> An artist’s impression of Enzo’s Homes’ developmen­t at Penllergae­r

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