Western Mail

‘It just needs a bit more love’ – the Welsh seaside resort promised so much but still waiting for change

Like many seaside towns around the British Isles, Porthcawl’s heyday has passed but the town could be so much better with a little ambition, campaigner­s tell Conor Gogarty

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THE sun is shining and the sky is blue, though it’s a little chillier than the summer days that helped Porthcawl make its name, when mining families would flock to its beaches in huge numbers.

A lot has changed for the seaside resort since that mid-20th-century heyday but some things, like the golden beaches, have stayed much the same.

Take Salt Lake car park.

For around half a century the 2,800-space site has been at the centre of various regenerati­on plans for Porthcawl, and locals are still waiting for something to be done.

“Some of the older generation are quite apathetic by this point,” local campaigner Gemma Lewis tells us on a salty-breezed spring morning at the car park. “My mum was saying, ‘Oh, don’t get involved, nothing ever happens.’”

It wouldn’t be fair to describe Porthcawl as a town in trouble but it is a conundrum.

On one hand it boasts an impressive high street and remains a desirable place to live, with fast-rising house prices and even new Miamistyle mansions. On the other, it has a lack of leisure facilities, a controvers­ial funfair, hotel struggles and, above all, a pessimism that proper regenerati­on will ever happen.

Some of the residents and businesses we interview seem reluctant to hope, but Jamie Strong and Gemma Lewis are determined to help change that. The pair lead A Voice for the Future Porthcawl, a group fighting for the community to be heard in the latest scheme for regenerati­on – so far, they feel, with mixed results.

Jamie, a constructi­on engineer, and Gemma, who owns zero-waste shop Pantri Box in Newton Village, meet us at Salt Lake.

Their love for their home town is immediatel­y apparent. At one point Jamie looks up to the clear sky over Porthcawl, then turns towards the grey clouds further inland.

“I’m not saying we have sun all the time, but we have our own microclima­te,” he says with a smile.

“Often you’ll drive into Porthcawl and see the clouds lift.”

When Jamie and Gemma speak about the town, their passion is tinged with frustratio­n, much of it to do with Salt Lake. For more than 50 years a series of developmen­ts – from a swimming-pool to a marina – have been planned for the site, only to fall through. In the last decade, Morrisons and Tesco both pulled out of schemes to open a supermarke­t on part of the land, though an Aldi is finally scheduled to launch there next year.

Jamie, 46, remembers locals’ hopes for a pool being discussed as far back as his childhood.

“People raised thousands but it never materialis­ed,” he says.

“They never managed to convince Bridgend council. The money ended up being used for changing-rooms at Locks Lane playing-fields. You look at how Bridgend and Maesteg have pools. We pay a lot into the coffers but it doesn’t always get spent here.”

“And we live by the sea so we should know how to swim,” laughs Gemma, 40, who left Porthcawl and spent 15 years working in the London fashion industry before returning a couple of years ago with the town still awaiting regenerati­on.

The council has approved a strategy for the waterfront area including Salt Lake and Sandy Bay, with 1,100 new homes, a leisure developmen­t, bus interchang­e and multi-storey car park. For months, the Voice for the Future group – which has 875 members on Facebook – had pushed for the council to add more green space to the plans. So there was much excitement when the council said it had made changes, meaning less of the housing would be allocated to

Salt Lake and the site would get a “seafront park” the size of about two football pitches.

The announceme­nt said Salt Lake and the newly pedestrian­ised Eastern Promenade would be a “worldclass destinatio­n” with space for markets and attraction­s like mini golf or an outdoor cinema.

“Everyone was excited about this lovely green area,” says Jamie. “Then we saw the picture.”

It turned out the revised plans were for “predominan­tly hard surfaced” spaces with “green landscape within them”. For many members of Voice for the Future, the design had far less green than they had expected of a “seafront park”.

Gemma says: “It could be a wonderful seaside area. We’re thinking, ‘Have we been sold a false dream?’”

Housing is much needed in Porthcawl, which last year saw a 14% surge in property prices – the fourth-highest rise of any coastal area in the UK. The council’s consultati­on showed most locals would support some new homes, though the scale of residentia­l developmen­t came back as one of the biggest worries. The 1,100 homes across the waterfront – including 175 at Salt Lake – will range from family houses to flats, with 40% set to be affordable. Gemma believes the housing must be balanced with space for activities.

“I remember when I was younger we would just hang round on the Prom,” she says. “There’s no cinema, no pool. We just want open green space for people to be able to make their own activities.”

One positive of recent years has been the arrival of several popular places to eat. Cosy Corner Lounge is well-known for its seafood, while the Harbour Bar & Kitchen has brought life to a disused stone warehouse called the Jennings Building, with new flats above.

But there remains a need for “things to do other than the beach”, says Gemma. This may be reflected

in the fortunes of some hotels. The Glamorgan Holiday Hotel has been unused for five years since closing due to a lack of custom, while the Porthcawl Hotel site is an empty eyesore in the town centre. At another local hotel, a worker tells us the owner is looking to redevelop.

The town’s regenerati­on plan includes a new “luxury spa waterfront hotel”.

Gemma believes a “focal attraction” could boost tourism. The century-old Coney Beach funfair has a nostalgic charm for many, but it will close – at least in its current form – and make way for the waterfront developmen­t. Change is overdue, says Gemma.

“In the summer the fairground is packed, but it’s neglected and dated. I think back in the 1940s it was hugely popular, and nice and clean and sparkling. It has slowly gone downhill.”

Jamie has a vision of his children playing happily in new leisure facilities at Salt Lake. A pump cycle track and splash park are popular ideas among A Voice for the Future members, with more public consultati­on to come.

“It could be amazing,” Gemma adds. “I think that’s the frustratio­n. There’s a lack of ambition. Porthcawl has incredible views and beaches, the people are lovely. It just needs a bit more love.”

We move on to John Street. Pedestrian­ised from 11am to 5pm, Porthcawl’s main shopping street is in good health, especially against a backdrop of so many Welsh high streets reeling from Covid. There is only the odd empty unit and plenty of charming independen­ts, from a florist to a shoe shop to a bakery.

Colour bursts from an array of fruit, veg and bedding plants on tables outside the Fruit Bowl shop. From pots of broad beans to geraniums, the affable owner, Simon Taylor, is proud to offer a wider range of items than your average greengroce­r.

The former builder, 53, says: “This has been a fruit shop for 60 years but I bought it 18 months ago. Covid stopped me doing much building work and in my madness I bought a fruit shop. It’s the best thing I’ve ever done. People still want to see colourful things outside.”

Simon thinks there is a good buzz to John Street, especially with the new fortnightl­y craft market. “I think it’s an asset that it’s pedestrian­ised,” he adds. “It gives everyone a sense of security to get up the street.”

Simon has lived in Porthcawl for 25 years – more than long enough to have become somewhat sceptical about regenerati­on schemes. “I am optimistic that the plans would be good, but it’s whether these plans will come to fruition. There have been a lot of plans for all sorts of things.”

Simon is excited about the fourbay bus interchang­e coming to the Portway. The council has promised more frequent buses, which would link Porthcawl to the South Wales Metro. Inspired by Transport for

London, the £734m Metro will allow passengers to travel across south Wales on buses, trains and trams using a single ticket. In Porthcawl, car parking will be cut by the waterfront developmen­t, as the council envisions more people arriving by bus – a shift for the 16,000-strong town so dependent on cars since its train station closed in 1963.

Simon believes the Metro link will be positive.

“It should help people get in and out,” he says. “It’ll make it easier for people to enjoy the town.”

Breaking from his upbeat outlook for a moment, Simon points to a source of frustratio­n on the high street – the disused Porthcawl Hotel site opposite, with its empty ground-floor retail units and peeling frontage.

“It’s not very attractive,” he says. “I heard a rumour there could be a gents’ outlet and bar at the bottom with luxury flats above. That would be absolutely fantastic.”

Over on the seafront esplanade is an illustrati­on that ambition hasn’t always stalled in Porthcawl. The art deco Grand Pavilion theatre, built in 1932, is full of character with its huge dome and its Tuscan-style columns. It has a busy schedule, especially when September’s Elvis Presley festival sees lookalikes fill Porthcawl, drawing tens of thousands of visitors to the town.

Up towards Rest Bay is another eye-catching developmen­t. The seven-bedroom Miami-style mansion, with its sea-view balconies and sections jutting off at audacious angles, made headlines when it went on the market for £1.3m in 2020. It’s one of several recent luxury developmen­ts along this stretch, which some locals call “Millionair­es’ Row”.

When we knock on the door, the homeowner, Clare Braham, is in a rush but she finds a minute to tell us her main hope for Porthcawl’s regenerati­on – more leisure activities.

The mum-of-four, a property developer who has always lived in the town, says: “There’s not enough for the children. Everyone around here seems to have the same view, that there is nothing local for the kids, no water park or anything like that.”

In front of the home, preparatio­n work is under way for a house which will mostly block Clare’s views to the sea.

The 39-year-old says she will miss looking out from her balcony in the evenings, but she doesn’t seem overly vexed. “I love it here,” she says.

Bridgend council pointed out £6m has recently been invested into the Western Breakwater, Eastern Promenade and Sandy Bay sea defences; £2.1m on the transforma­tion of Cosy Corner, £3m for the Town Beach sea defences, £3m on Porthcawl Marina, £2.87m in electric vehicle charging points, £2.5m for the Jennings Building, £1.5m for the Rest Bay Watersport­s Centre, £1m for various Porthcawl Townscape Heritage projects, £300,000 for the seafront cycle network, £70,000 in free public wi-fi and £580,000 in green infrastruc­ture at Wilderness Lake.

A spokesman said: “Our vision for regenerati­ng Porthcawl is based on realistic, achievable and sustainabl­e goals which will enhance the town. The council remains committed towards its overarchin­g vision for regenerati­ng Porthcawl, and our strategy addresses the key issues and takes account of the many different views that have been expressed.”

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 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Coney Beach Pleasure Park
Coney Beach Pleasure Park
 ?? ?? Gemma Lewis
Gemma Lewis
 ?? ?? > Porthcawl
> Porthcawl
 ?? ?? > Salt Lake car park
> Salt Lake car park
 ?? ?? > Jamie Strong
> Jamie Strong

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