BBC Cymru Wales
BBC Cymru Wales
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Headquarters |
Broadcasting House,
Llandaff, Cardiff |
Broadcast area |
Wales |
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TV stations |
BBC One Wales
BBC Two Wales |
Radio stations
in this area |
BBC Radio Wales
BBC Radio Cymru |
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Websites |
BBC Wales (English)
BBC Cymru (Welsh) |
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BBC Cymru Wales (also known as English: BBC Wales or Welsh: BBC Cymru) is a division of the British Broadcasting Corporation for Wales. Based at Broadcasting House in the Llandaff area of Cardiff, it directly employs over 1200 people, and produces a broad range of television, radio and online services in both the Welsh and English languages.[1]
Outside London, BBC Wales is the largest BBC production centre in the United Kingdom, partly due to its additional slate of Welsh language programmes for BBC Radio Cymru and the Welsh language broadcaster S4C.
History
BBC Cymru Wales building in Bangor, Gwynedd, North Wales.
The original BBC Wales television station (now known as BBC One Wales debuted on 9 February 1964 to much fanfare (short television promotions proclaimed Wales gets its very own TV service in 1964!).[2] However, the BBC had been producing television programmes in Wales since the mid 1950s.
The first production studios were established in a converted chapel (since demolished) in Broadway, Cardiff. The first programmes were produced and transmitted live from in a temporary studio, later to become part of the scenery-dock, while two proper studios were constructed within the structure of the church. These studio played host to drama and some entertainment programmes as well as news and current affairs including the daily Welsh magazine programme Heddiw and the English language news programme Wales Today. In this pre-videotape era, film was played into programmes from a telecine machine in Bristol or London until telecine was actually installed in Broadway. Film processing for news was carried out by a firm called Park Pictures in Cardiff until BBC processing was installed in Stacey Road.
Prior to 1964, BBC Wales shared its television station with the West of England as the Wenvoe transmitter near Cardiff also served viewers in both South Wales and the Westcountry. The 20 minute slot for regional news each evening was therefore split between Wales Today and the West of England's Points West. The establishment of a dedicated BBC Wales channel transmitted from a new mast built alongside the main transmitter mast at Wenvoe enabled a full length Wales Today to be broadcast for the first time along with other Welsh and English-language programming for Wales.
Programming
Today, BBC Cymru Wales produces television programming in English and Welsh both for the "opt out" sections of the BBC One and Two network feeds, and for the dedicated Welsh-language channel S4C.[1] Perhaps its best-known Welsh-language programme is the soap opera Pobol y Cwm, which has run since 1974. BBC Wales also operates two radio stations: BBC Radio Wales in English and BBC Radio Cymru, which broadcasts in Welsh. The national television news programme Wales Today is one of the world's longest-running daily television news programmes, having been on air since 17 September 1962. The Welsh language news service Newyddion, produced by BBC Wales for S4C, combines international and UK news with the national news of Wales.
Production
BBC Wales also provides programming for the BBC's UK networks. In recent years, its drama output has been particularly successful, including the 2005 revival of the classic science-fiction series Doctor Who and its spin-off Torchwood (2006). In addition, BBC Wales commissions other drama output for the BBC network from independent producers, such as Life on Mars (2006–07). The BBC National Orchestra of Wales was based at Broadcasting House in Cardiff, but moved to BBC Hoddinott Hall at the Wales Millennium Centre in January 2009, and performs regularly throughout Wales and internationally.
New studios
It was announced in March 2009 that the BBC will move the filming of shows such as Casualty and Crimewatch to studios in Cardiff[3] following an announcement stating they were going to concentrate on more programmes being made in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, instead of most of them being made in London.
Work on the BBC Wales Drama Village in Cardiff Bay began on 24 June 2010. The 170,000 sq ft (15,800 sq m) site will eventually house productions including Casualty, Pobol y Cwm, The Sarah Jane Adventures and Doctor Who. The village is part of the BBC's commitment to double television network production from Cardiff by 2016. Once the studios, offices and external filming lots are fully fitted out, filming will begin for Casualty and Pobol y Cwm in autumn 2011.[4]
Programming
Produced in-house by BBC Cymru Wales
- For Wales
- Wales Today (1962–present)
- Week In Week Out (1964–present)
- Pobol y Cwm (1974–present)
- Newyddion (1982–present)
- Satellite City (1996–1999)
- Belonging (1999–2009)
- The Bench (2001–2002)
- First Degree (2002)
- High Hopes (2002–present)
- For the UK
It was announced in March 2009 that the BBC will move the filming of shows such as Casualty and Crimewatch to studios in Cardiff.[3]
Commissioned from independent producers by BBC Cymru Wales
- For Wales
- Coal House (2007–2008)
- The Wright Taste (2008)
- Crash (2009–present)
- For the UK
- Shakespeare: The Animated Tales (1992, 1994)
- Casanova (2005)
- The Girl in the Café (2005)
- Life on Mars (2006–2007)
- Wide Sargasso Sea (2006)
- This Life + 10 (2007)
- Ashes to Ashes (2008–2010, spinoff of Life on Mars)
- Merlin (2008–present)
- Being Human (2009–present)
- Sherlock (2010 - present)
See also
- Broadcasting House (Cardiff)
References
External links
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) |
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Services |
Television (station list) · Radio (station list) · BBC Online · BBC Red Button (Ceefax)
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Management |
BBC Trust · Sir Michael Lyons (Chair) · Mark Thompson (Director-General) · Mark Byford (Deputy Director-General)
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Departments |
Television · Radio · News · Sport · Weather · Children's (CBeebies · CBBC) · BBC Switch · Natural History · Monitoring · BBC Films · BBC Archives · BBC Academy
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Nations and regions |
English Regions (East · East Midlands · London · North East and Cumbria · North West · South · South East · South West · West · West Midlands · Yorkshire · Yorkshire and Lincolnshire) · Scotland (Alba) · Wales · Northern Ireland
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Commercial subsidiaries |
BBC Worldwide · BBC Studios and Post Production
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History |
Timeline · British Broadcasting Company · Logo of the BBC · Coat of Arms · Board of Governors · BBC controversies
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Key properties |
Broadcasting House London · Bush House London · Television Centre London · White City London · Media Village London · BBC Birmingham · Drama Village Birmingham · Pacific Quay Glasgow · Broadcasting House Cardiff · Drama Village Cardiff Bay · MediaCityUK Manchester · Maida Vale Studios
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Finance |
Television licence (history)
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Projects |
Dirac · The Box · backstage.bbc.co.uk · Domesday · YouView · Freesat (channel list)
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Category · Portal |
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BBC Television |
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UK channels |
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Joint ventures and
international channels |
BBC Alba · BBC America · BBC Arabic Television · BBC Canada · BBC Entertainment · BBC HD (International) · BBC Kids · BBC Knowledge (International) · BBC Lifestyle · BBC Persian Television · BBC World News · Community Channel · UKTV (UK and Ireland) · UKTV (Australia and New Zealand)
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Defunct channels |
BBC Knowledge (UK) · BBC Choice (in Northern Ireland) · BBC Food · BBC World Service Television · BBC TV Europe · BBC Japan · BBC Select · BBC Prime
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Television in Wales |
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BBC |
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ITV |
WWN · TWW · ITSWW · Harlech/HTV · ITV Wales
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Other channels |
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Buildings and structures |
Broadcasting House Cardiff · Drama Village Cardiff Bay · Wenvoe Transmitter
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Media in Cardiff |
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Television and film production |
Aspect Television • BBC Wales • ITV Wales • S4C • Broadcasting House Cardiff • Drama Village Cardiff Bay • BAFTA Cymru • Dragon International Film Studios • Cube Interactive • Cardiff Film Festival
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Television series and films |
Drama
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Comedy
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Gavin & Stacey
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Factual
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Newyddion • Wales Tonight • CF99
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Press |
Western Mail • South Wales Echo • Echo Extra • Y Dinesydd • Gair rhydd • Buzz • Metro • Cardiff School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies • Media Wales
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Radio |
BBC Radio Wales • BBC Radio Cymru • Red Dragon FM • Gold • Real Radio • Xpress Radio • Radio Cardiff
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Online |
WalesOnline • CardiffOnline
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Economy and industry of Cardiff |
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Company and organisation headquarters |
118 118 • Admiral Group • BBC Cymru Wales • Brains Brewery • Clark's Pies • Cube Interactive • IQE • ITV Wales • Julian Hodge Bank • Media Wales • Peacocks • Peski Records • Placid Casual • Principality Building Society • See Monkey Do Monkey • S4C • The Barcud Derwen Group • Advanced Transport Systems • Veritair • WJEC • Wales Social Partners Unit • Welsh National Opera
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Company and organisation major locations |
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Major public sector employers |
Cardiff and Vale University Health Board • Cardiff Bus • Cardiff Council • Cardiff University • Coleg Glan Hafren • Department of Trade and Industry • HM Revenue and Customs • National Assembly for Wales Commission • University of Glamorgan • University of Wales Institute, Cardiff • Welsh Assembly Government
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Retail |
Shopping (St. David's • Queens Arcade • Capitol Centre • Howells • The Hayes • Central Market • Victorian Arcades) • Retail Parks (Cardiff Bay Retail Park • Capital Retail Park • Culverhouse Cross)
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Hospitality |
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Regeneration and development |
Cardiff Bay • Cardiff International Sports Village • Cardiff International Pool • Cardiff Bay Development Corporation • St. David's 2 • Leckwith Development
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Tourism |
Wales Millennium Centre • St Fagans National History Museum • National Museum • Cardiff Castle • Castell Coch • Senedd • Cardiff Bay Visitor Centre • Techniquest • The Cardiff Story
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Major events |
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19th and 20th centuries |
Bank of Wales • Cardiff Docks • Coal Exchange • Glamorganshire Canal • South Wales coalfield • Taff Vale Railway • Tiger Bay •
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