Listed buildings in Cardiff Bay
There are many listed buildings in Cardiff Bay, part of Cardiff, capital city of Wales. A listed building is one considered to be of special architectural, historical or cultural significance, and has restrictions on amendments or demolition. Buildings are listed as either Grade I, II* and II buildings lists, with the Grade I being the most important.
Cardiff Bay describes the redeveloped docklands area of the city, including the neighbourhoods of Butetown and Atlantic Wharf, previously better known as Tiger Bay. It is bounded approximately by the River Taff to the west, the Bute East Dock to the east and the mainline railway to the north.
Key
| Grade | Criteria |
| Grade I | Buildings of exceptional, usually national, interest. |
| Grade II* | Particularly important buildings of more than special interest. |
| Grade II | Buildings of special interest, which warrant every effort being made to preserve them. |
Grade II listed buildings
| Name | Photograph | Grade | Date | Location | Description |
| Aberdare House, Mount Stuart Square | Cardiff Bay | Offices created from two 3-storey houses in 1920. | |||
| Baltic House, Mount Stuart Square | 1915 | Cardiff Bay | A six-storey building designed by Teather and Wilson in an Edwardian Baroque style. Baltic House faces the main entrance to the Cardiff Coal Exchange. | ||
| Bonded Warehouse, Atlantic Wharf | 1861 | Atlantic Wharf | Four storey brick warehouse building at one end of the Bute East Dock. Constructed using an iron frame. Converted into office accommodation during the 1980s. | ||
| Church of St Mary and St Stephen, Bute Street | 1843 | Butetown | Church designed by John Foster of Liverpool, with a later addition by Arts and Crafts architect J. D. Sedding. | ||
| Cory's Building, Bute Street | 1889 | Cardiff Bay | Designed by Cardiff architects Bruton & Williams in a Free Italianate Classical style. The five-storey building has internal staircases with iron balustrades. | ||
| Eli Jenkins, Bute Crescent | Cardiff Bay | Mid nineteenth Century, with metal railings. | |||
| 'D Shed', The Flourish | 1870s | Cardiff Bay | The building marked on First Edition Ordnance Survey map as warehouse beside Bute East Dock Basin. Known as the "D" Shed, it was dismantled in the 1990s, and re-assembled on its present site, opening as Craft in the Bay in June 2002 | ||
| Locky's Cottage, Harbour Drive | Cardiff Bay | Small stone hut near Roath Basin. | |||
| Midland Bank, James Street/Bute Street | 1874 | Cardiff Bay | Designed by F. Cutlan in a Venetian style, using Bathstone and yellow brick. | ||
| Mount Stuart Graving Docks, Stuart Street | Cardiff Bay | Three ship-repairing docks opening into Cardiff Bay. | |||
| The Big Windsor, Stuart Street | 1855 | Cardiff Bay | Public house established in 1855 and now trading as an Indian restaurant. |