11944 businesses in North Wales, Wales
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Archaeological Site
Furniture Shop
Hairdresser
Mall. Hours: Mo-Sa 10:00-17:00;Su 10:00-16:00. St. Asaph Road. LL17 0UY
📞 +44 1745 730072Scenic Viewpoint
Archaeological Site
Roofer
Pottery
Craft
Takeaway / Fast Food. Cuisine: chinese. 34 Welsh Road. CH5 2RA
Café
Monument
Pub. Twr Cuhelyn Street. LL71 8DB
Antiques. Hours: Tu,Th 14:00-17:00; We,Fr 14:00-16:00. Mona Street. LL68 9AN
Archaeological Site
Castle
Community Centre
Nature Reserve
Social / Care Facility. Denbigh Street. LL26 0AE
Hotel. LL55 4NB
Restaurant. Cuisine: indian. Hours: Mo-Th 17:00-22:30; Fr-Su 17:00-23:00. 4-6 Denbigh Street. LL26 0LL
Chalet. 1 Chapel Street. LL58 8DS
Café. Cuisine: coffee_shop
Community Centre
Place Of Worship
Chalet
Place Of Worship
Community Centre
Guest House. 12 Abbey Road. LL30 2EA
Guest House
Chalet
Pub. LL53 6DB
Café. Y Stryd Fawr. LL23 7LU
Café. 37 High Street. LL59 5EF
Guest House. LL27 0JJ
📞 +44 1492 640208Restaurant
Educational Institution Office. 68-72 Market Street. LL65 1UW
Pub. LL72 8HB
📞 +44 1248 410777From 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