Western Mail

Museum’s rebuilding of famous city pub takes step forward

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IT WAS one of Cardiff’s best known pubs and a decade after it closed, progress in rebuilding the Vulcan at St Fagans National Museum of History has taken a huge step forward.

Despite being a much-loved institutio­n of the capital, the pub – which counted members of the Manic Street Preachers among its customers – faced demolition for decades.

In 2009, about 5,000 people signed a petition to keep the pub open, but it finally closed its doors in 2012, and was taken down brick by brick from Adam Street in Adamsdown before being relocated to the museum.

The museum’s specialist team has been reconstruc­ting the iconic pub at its new site on the museum grounds, with building work scheduled to be completed by the end of 2023.

It will function as a real pub and people will be able to go for a drink, but the opening date has not yet been confirmed.

Yesterday, work began to fit the roof of the pub.

Curator of historic buildings Dafydd Wiliam said there is still “plenty to be done”.

Once the building work is finished, he said it will take a little while longer to prepare to open the building to the pubublic. He said Covid had ad impacted the recon- struction “quite significan­tly” but now the full building team is on site and is it “moving on at such a quick pace”.

In terms of its simi- larity to the original al pub, Mr Wiliam said it’s “exactly the same building”, ilding”, with almost all the same ame building material used.

“We were very fortunate to have access to all of the building plans from 1901,” he said. “So we’re very familiar with the changes that the building has undergone. We surveyed the building as it stood in 2012 jus just before taking it dow down. So bringing thes these all together, this is a millimetre­accurate representa­tion of the buildi building that we took down and people are familiar with.” He added that there are a couple of small changes to make the building safer than it was, such as new, more robust roof trusses, as the old ones were too thin.

“In the same way,” he continued, “because the Vulcan was part of a terrace, its two side walls were really thin, and in fact they were only four inches thick, because the bricks used were laid on their edge. So we’ve strengthen­ed that as well.”

The original tiles on the front of the building, some of which were cracked and chipped, were also not fit to be reused but the company that made them in 1914 is still going and has remade the tiles using the original moulds.

The Vulcan Hotel opened in 1853 to serve the mainly Irish community of what was then called Newtown.

During its long history, it saw major changes in the city.

The Vulcan reconstruc­tion will emulate its appearance in 1915.

This was an important year for the pub – it had just undergone a major refurbishm­ent that saw its distinctiv­e green and brown tiles added to the frontage, as well as a redesign of its interior.

 ?? Jonathan Myers ?? > The Vulcan Hotel is being rebuilt brick by brick at St Fagans National Museum of History
Jonathan Myers > The Vulcan Hotel is being rebuilt brick by brick at St Fagans National Museum of History
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 ?? ?? > The Vulcan as it was
> The Vulcan as it was

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