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Betws-y-Coed Travel Guide powered by advice from Real Travelers

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Introduction

by Frommers Travel Guides

    363km (226 miles) W of London; 70km (44 miles) SE of Holyhead

    This idyllic Snowdonia village, with tumbling rivers, waterfalls, and mountains, is nestled in the tree-lined valley of the River Conwy. It has an antique church with a Norman font; old bridges, stone houses, and hotels on rocky outcrops; and woodland paths.

    Although crowded in summer, this town is one of the best centers for exploring North Wales. It's mainly a one-street town, but you get the feel that you're in the great outdoors far removed from England's polluted cities of the Midlands. There's an alpine feeling about the place.

    The town is known for its eight bridges, of which our favorite is the Waterloo Bridge at the village's southern end, the construction of Telford in 1815 in cast iron. There's also a suspension bridge near St. Michael's Church. If you walk upon it, it sways in the wind but seems perfectly safe. The most regal bridge is Pont-y-Pair, "the bridge of the cauldron," bounding the Llugwy River to the north. In fact, walking across the bridges of Betws-y-Coed and taking in the views is one of the main reasons to come here.

Betws-y-Coed Travel Experiences

Traveler Photos of Betws-y-Coed

View from the Ramparts, Caernarfon Castle, looking at the 14th Century Walls A Summer Day at Llyn Tegid (Bala Lake) The Ruin of Valle Crusis Abbey, near Llangollen Castle View
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