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Home > 48 Hours in Cardiff

48 Hours in Cardiff

Cardiff’s capital appeal

Within the one square mile of Cardiff’s bustling city centre are the big three attractions: the Millennium Stadium, the National Museum and Cardiff Castle. These attractions sit alongside luxury hotels, a network of shopping malls and arcades, and a wide range of restaurants, bars and cafes.
Here are some suggestions for a flying visit to the city. You’ll find full details of things to do, where to stay, what’s on Where to eat and drink at www.visitcardiff.com
Remember you can also book your accommodation online. Get up to 70% discount on standard hotel rates as well as exclusive deals and Special Offers with our online booking system.  Read unbiased reviews from previous hotel guests and benefit from instant on-line booking confirmations. Find out more.
 
 

Millennium StadiumDay 1:

The Millennium Stadium, built in 1999, helped place Cardiff firmly on the world sporting map and has played host to the Rugby World Cup, artists such as Madonna, Red Hot Chilli Peppers, U2 and the Rolling Stones, as well as the FA Cup Final for six years. Now no visit to the city is complete without a tour of the 74,000-seater stadium, which offers visitors the chance to explore the changing rooms and even try out the Queen’s seat Cardiff Castlein the Royal Box.
 
Cardiff Castle is just around the corner from the stadium, but has been there for around 2000 years longer. A fort was first built in Cardiff by the Romans in AD55 and further fortifications were added by the Normans in the 11th Century. Then, in the late 19th Century, the 3rd Marquess of Bute spent a portion of his vast fortune on an extravagant refurbishment, transforming the castle interiors into a Gothic, mock-Medieval palace.
Queen Street Shopping
A couple of minutes walk from the castle is another surprising find; the National Museum Cardiff. As well as extensive museum displays the gallery boasts one of the finest collections of Impressionist paintings outside Paris, including works by Renoir, Monet and Cezanne, bequeathed to the gallery in the mid 20th century by two wealthy Welsh spinsters – the Davies sisters.
 
You could just about squeeze a little shopping into your first 24 hours in Cardiff. Pedestrianised streets, undercover malls and a network of Victorian and Edwardian arcades ensure that it’s easy to get around the hundreds of brand name stores, designer boutiques and quirky gift shops - many of them with a Welsh flavour.
 



Day 2: Cardiff Bay at night

A 10-minute journey south of the centre, on the hop-on hop-off tour bus by direct ‘Bendybus’ or by train, is Cardiff Bay, the capital’s newest development. One hundred years ago the docklands were the hub of the world’s coal industry, transporting millions of tonnes of coal across the globe. The Bay boasts a 200 hectare freshwater lake for sailing and watersports; the five star St David’s Hotel and Spa, cuisine from around the world in the restaurants in Mermaid Quay, and the new home for Welsh National Opera – the Wales Millennium Centre.
 
The centre was inspired by the Welsh landscape, language and culture; much of it was built with Welsh materials and it provides a suitably impressive stage for Welsh opera singers such as Bryn Terfel and Katherine Jenkins, as well as a wide variety of international musicals, ballet, theatre and modern dance.
 
The Bay is also home to the ‘Doctor Who Up Close’ exhibition, where visitors can see monsters, costumes and props from the BBC Wales series – much of which was filmed in and around Cardiff, and the area is one of the mains settings for the BBC’s adult Doctor Who spinoff – Torchwood.
 
Another short 15-minute drive from the Bay takes you out to the beautiful Vale of Glamorgan. Nestled here are championship standard golf courses at the Vale Hotel, acres of vineyards producing award winning Welsh wines, and one of Britain’s most interesting and ambitious museums - St. Fagans National History Museum. The museum features a variety of historic buildings from across Wales – all of which were taken apart brick by brick and carefully reconstructed in the museum to present a view of life in Wales over the last 500 years. The museum village features a working bakery, blacksmiths, saddler, tea shop and store, and you are guaranteed to hear Welsh, the language of heaven, in everyday use.
 

After a couple of days in Cardiff there is still the rest of Wales to explore of course. Cardiff's main train station provides links north to the Brecon Beacons National Park, west to the Pembrokeshire Coast or east to the Wye Valley.