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St Joseph's Cathedral, Swansea

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Country
  
Wales

Website
  
MeneviaCathedral.org

Heritage designation
  
Grade II listed

Phone
  
+44 1792 652683

Bishop
  
Tom Burns

Architect
  
Peter Paul Pugin

Denomination
  
Roman Catholic

Consecrated
  
1888

Opened
  
25 November 1888

Province
  
Cardiff

Designated as world heritage site
  
30 March 1987

St Joseph's Cathedral, Swansea

Location
  
Swansea, West Glamorgan

Address
  
Convent St, Swansea SA1 2BX, UK

Diocese
  
Roman Catholic Diocese of Menevia

Similar
  
Wrexham Cathedral, Cathedral of St Michael a, Ayr Cathedral, Birmingham Orthodox Cathedral, Middlesbrough Cathedral

The Cathedral Church of Saint Joseph – also known as St Joseph's Cathedral, Menevia Cathedral or Swansea Cathedral – is a Grade II-listed Roman Catholic cathedral in Swansea, Wales. It is the seat of the Bishop of Menevia and mother church of the Diocese of Menevia. The cathedral was built in the late nineteenth century and is located in the Greenhill area of Swansea.

Contents

History

Originally built as a church, St Joseph's was conceived by Father Wulstan Richards, OSB who came to Greenhill in 1875. It was designed by Peter Paul Pugin and took two years to build at a cost of £10,000. The building was officially opened on 25 November 1888 while still under construction. Built as a church, it was converted to a cathedral in 1987 for the redefined Diocese of Menevia. It was designated a Grade II listed building on 30 March 1987.

Description

The plan of the building is that of an apsidal chancel flanked by side chapels with a seven-bay aisled nave, a polygonal tower with spire in the north-west corner and twin porches on the western facade. Its walls are coursed bull-nosed masonry with bath stone dressings and red Dumfries stone in the nave piers and responds. The cathedral has a modern pantile roof and there is a gabled parapet, topped with a finial on the western side of the building above a small arched opening over a four-light Geometric traceried window. The nave has three-light clerestory traceried windows and the east facade has a lower clerestory and a three-light window under a corbelled gable with a finial. The ceiling has radiating ribs that extend to the walls.

References

St Joseph's Cathedral, Swansea Wikipedia