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Saint Joseph's Cathedral,
Greenhill, Swansea, Wales.
Photo: 2 August 2012.
Source: This file was derived from Saint Josephs Cathedral Swansea.JPG.
Author:
Derivative work: Rabanus Flavus.
(Wikimedia Commons)
Originally built as a Church, Saint 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 a Grade II Listed Building on 30 March 1987.
The Nave,
Saint Joseph's Cathedral,
Greenhill, Swansea, Wales.
Illustration: LATIN MASS SOCIETY
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.