Trinity Methodist Church, Cardiff
Trinity Methodist Church, now the Trinity Centre, is a Grade II listed former Methodist church in Adamsdown, Cardiff, Wales.
Church
The church was built in 1896–1897 by Albert Victor Ingall & Sons of Birmingham for the United Methodist Free Churches as a replacement for their chapel on Guildford Crescent. The old chapel was sold and became the Masonic Hall. Originally named Newport Road United Methodist Free Church, it was the last built of a number of Methodist presences in the area, the others being Roath Road and Broadway. By the postwar years, this situation had become untenable: the Roath Road church was rendered unusable during the Cardiff Blitz of 1941, and both had seen a decline in attendance. In 1950, the decision was made to merge the Roath Road and Broadway congregations into that of Newport Road, which was renamed Trinity Methodist Church upon the merger. The Roath Road church was demolished in 1955. The Broadway site was sold to the BBC for £7000 and was used as a studio until. It subsequently became a commercial premises before being converted into a mosque in 1980. It was destroyed on 19 September 1989 by a fire which caused substantial damage to several other buildings on Broadway.An extensive remodelling occurred at Trinity in 1978, during which the building was subdivided horizontally by Wyn Thomas & Partners.