2895 businesses in Wales
Tattoo Studio. Hours: Mo-Th 09:00-23:00; Fr-Sa 09:00-20:00; Su off. 181 Upper Dock Street. NP20 1DG
📞 +44 1633 547891Tattoo Studio
Museum. Stuart Street. CF10 5BW
📞 +44 2920 475475Memorial
Memorial
Memorial
Museum
Archaeological Site
Memorial
Historic Ruins
Historic Ruins
Memorial
Library
Museum
Memorial
Historic Ruins
Memorial
Theatre
Memorial
Theatre. Beaufort Hill. NP23 5QQ
Artwork
Tattoo Studio. Hours: Mo off; Tu-Sa 11:00-18:00; Su off. 173 Caerleon Road. NP19 7FX
📞 +44 1633 211 068Museum
Museum
Archaeological Site
Museum. Hours: Fr-Sa 10:00-16:00
Theatre. 22 Cambrian Road. NP20 4AB
📞 +44 7557 300 298Tattoo Studio. 12 Church Street. LL77 7DU
Archaeological Site
Art Gallery
Historic Ruins
Wayside Cross
Memorial
Library. Heath Park Way
Art Gallery
Monument
Monument
Memorial
Memorial
Arts Centre. Lower Church Street. NP16 5HJ
📞 +44 7526 445 195Art Gallery. Hours: "art gallery that opens every now and then". Market Street. LL68 9HT
Memorial
Tattoo Studio
Memorial
Arts Centre
Art Gallery
Memorial
Arts Centre
Tattoo Studio. 36a Swansea Road
Monument
Archaeological Site
Historic Ruins
Monument
Tattoo Studio. 4 Dunraven Street. CF40 1QE
Monument
Memorial
Museum
Archaeological Site
Artwork
Theatre. 5 Woodbine Road. NP12 1QJ
From the first industrial nation to the technology behind the internet — Wales has always punched above its weight.
By 1851, Wales was the world's first industrial nation — the first country where more people worked in industry than agriculture. Swansea smelted one-third of the world's copper. North Wales produced one-third of global roofing slate. Merthyr's ironworks powered the British Empire. We invented the ball bearing, the hydrogen fuel cell, packet switching for the internet, and the eight-hour workday. We gave the world Viagra, radar, and the first mail-order business. Given that legacy, Wales should be among the world's wealthiest nations. It isn't — yet. Cymru Compass exists to help every Welsh business get found, because the next chapter of Welsh innovation starts with the businesses we have today.
Donald Davies built it in Wales — the technology that makes the internet work.
Philip Vaughan, 1794.
Sir William Grove, 1842.
Mumbles Railway, 1807.
Pryce Pryce-Jones, Newtown, 1861.
Swansea smelted one-third of the world's copper.
North Wales roofed the world — now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Robert Owen from Newtown pioneered the cooperative movement.
41,000+ Welsh businesses are listed here. The next great Welsh innovation could be one of them.
Useful links for businesses and communities across Wales