Pendine Museum of Speed

The Pendine Museum of Speed was dedicated to the use of Pendine Sands for land speed record attempts. It was opened in 1996 in the village of Pendine, on the south coast of Wales, and was owned and run by Carmarthenshire County Council. The museum received 33,522 visitors in 2009.[1]

Pendine Museum of Speed
Amgueddfa Cyflymder Pentywyn
A glass-fronted building
View from the beach
Pendine Museum of Speed is located in Carmarthenshire
Pendine Museum of Speed
Location within Carmarthenshire
Established1996 (1996)
LocationPendine, Carmarthenshire, Wales
Coordinates51°44′33″N 4°33′22″W / 51.7425°N 4.5562°W / 51.7425; -4.5562
TypeTransport museum
Visitors33,522 (2009)
OwnerCarmarthenshire County Council
WebsiteThe Museum of Speed
Inside the museum

For part of each summer the museum housed Babs, the land speed record car in which J. G. Parry-Thomas was killed in 1927. Babs was excavated in 1969 after 42 years of burial on the beach at Pendine Sands, and restored over the following 16 years by Owen Wyn Owen.[2][3]

In 2018 it was decided to replace the 1990s museum building, at a cost of £7 million.[4] In February 2021, the museum was closed and demolished. The new museum building was completed in early 2023 and opened on March 31. [5]

Babs was displayed at the Beaulieu Motor Museum until February 2019 and was returned to Pendine for the reopening back of the Museum of Speed.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Visitors to tourist attractions in Wales", StatsWales – Welsh Assembly Government, retrieved 25 July 2012
  2. ^ "Wales: Old girl with a racy past", Telegraph Media Group, 12 August 2000, retrieved 2 March 2013
  3. ^ "Former land speed record car on display in driver's hometown", ITV, 5 November 2012, retrieved 2 March 2013
  4. ^ "Pendine Sands to get £7m museum of speed". BBC News Online. 26 September 2018.
  5. ^ "Pendine Tourism Attractor project opens in time for Easter". Western Telegraph. 5 April 2023.

External links edit