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New Snowdon Summit Building Revealed

Wondering what the proposed new Snowdon Summit Station might look like, we've go an impression of the outside, plus first look at the interior plans. Fancy a cuppa then?


Posted: 4 May 2005
by Jon

Following on from our news article about the funding appeal for a new Snowdon Summit building, we thought you might be interested in some more details of the new building and the internals in particular.

Of course no building on a mountain top is going to feel like uncharted wilderness, but then with a full scale railway running to the summit, the top of Yr Wyddfa is never going to resemble most UK mountains. The argument runs that it's far better to have a sympathetically designed building on the top of the highest mountain in England and Wales than the present unprepossessing heap of concrete below. And, of course, it'll give the tourists something to do once they're up there...

There were actually been visitor facilities on the summit some 170 years ago - a hut offering refreshments no less - the train appeared by the end of the nineteenth century and in 1935 a station hotel and cafe was built and it's still there.

Plans for a new building were approved in January 2004 and it's been designed, by architects Furneaux Stewart to be an eco-friendly construction, more in sympathy with its location than before though occupying the same footprint. Leased and operated by the Snowdon Mountain Railway, it will offer refreshments, toilets, weather information (it's cloudy and cold again), a wind shelter and information and orientation.

If you're wondering what the outside may look like, there's an artists interpretation above, but we're talking a less obtrusive, shorter building faced with local stone similar to the summit rocks and with two non-reflective glass walls, one facing towards the summit and one looking out towards Moel Hebog. There won't be an external serving hatch, to reduce potential litter problems on the mountain. There are a lot more details at the Snowdon Summit web site but there's an emphasis on eco-friendliness and the use of local materials so that the buildings blend in more cleanly.

Pretty On The Inside

Of course the outside is important and, let's be honest, the only bit us hard-nosed mountaineering folk are ever going to see, because of course, we would never be tempted by a nice, hot cup of tea and some cake on a gnarly summer's day, but the inside matters too.

We've seen the so-called Interpretation Plan which outlines the, erm, interpretation for the Snowdon Summit Building. It's all about helping people to understand Snowdon and its surroundings in a sympathetic way and placing it in its context as a Welsh icon. That means educating the 35,000 odd annual visitors to the summit about the local geology, culture, flora and fauna as well as the work of the Snowdonia Park Authority. Interpretation, if you were wondering, is 'a way of imparting messages to visitors in a memorable way'. So there you go.

All the educational stuff will be housed within the building and aim to place Snowdon in context, including stuff that despite experienced walkers' familiarity with the mountain, they may be unaware of. Snowdon, for example, contains remants of ancient sealife.

What's encouraging, reading the document, is that the architects seem very sensitive to the context of the building, stressing repeatedly that it's not intended to compete with the mountain as an attraction, but to emphasise its significance. That theme carries on inside with plans to use the fabric of the building, including ideas like inserting graphical representations of local fossils and flowers, like the Snowdon lily, in walls and floors.

There are also plans to insert LCD screens into a glass interior wall and show films relating to the local landscape and the contruction of the building itself. There will be a Ranger's Alcove, complete with a Park Ranger to anser questions and give advice and a walkers' lobby and bag store where you can leave your pack while you're not going in to buy a cuppa...

Anyway, above are a few planning drawings to give you some idea of what's planned. We actually quite like them, but see what you think. You can get some idea of how the architechs plan to use the walls, ceilings and floors to add relevant detail and the general curviness of the structure. And those things above are pull out display trays in the walls. We reckon they might need to draw a few more chairs and tables though :-)

For more details of the new Snowdon Summit building project and for details of how to make a donation to the project, check out the Snowdon Summit web site .


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Discuss this story

Will you still be able to buy a pint of Guinness there then?

Posted: 05/05/2005 at 11:41

I can tell you that if you hang on a minute...

Posted: 05/05/2005 at 14:22

Ooh, that's exciting, apparently there's going to be a 'Snowdon Summit brand'. Eeek... I think they mean a marketing one rather than a red hot iron to be pressed into visitor's mountain-softened skin...

Posted: 05/05/2005 at 14:25

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