The Royal Mint opens its doors
25 Apr 2014 04:14 PM
Tourism Minister, Edwina Hart has announced
Welsh Government funding of £2.3 million towards the creation of a
visitor centre at the Royal Mint’s headquarters in Llantrisant. The
£7.7 million project will create a key tourist destination in South Wales
for domestic and overseas visitors whilst providing an economic boost for the
local area
For
the first time in its 1,000 year history, Britain’s oldest manufacturing
organisation, and the world’s leading export mint, will officially open
its doors to the general public, allowing them to get behind the scenes and see
for themselves the people and processes that put the pounds and pennies in
their pockets.
Construction of the purpose built visitor centre at The
Royal Mint’s home in Llantrisant will begin this spring, subject to
planning permission, and is expected to be completed by summer
2015.
Welsh Government funding will enable The Royal Mint to
safeguard 150 jobs within its commemorative coin division while also creating a
number of new jobs both in the development and delivery of the visitor
centre.
Visitors will have the opportunity to take a tour of The
Royal Mint to see exactly how the coins they use every day are designed and
made. This will not just be of interest to UK visitors; The Royal Mint
currently makes coins and medals for approximately 60 countries worldwide, so
visitors from around the world will be able to see where their coins are
created.
And
in an opportunity that is sure to delight young and old alike, guests will have
the ability to strike their own coin as an everlasting memento of their
visit.
As
well as gaining first-hand knowledge of the journey which coins and medals make
from start to finish, visitors will also be able to enjoy a range of static and
engaging, interactive experiences that will bring to life The Royal
Mint’s rich heritage and reveal many rare and unusual coins and medals
from the across the world.
Announcing the funding during a visit to The Royal Mint,
Tourism Minister Edwina Hart said:
“The new visitor centre will be an all year and
all weather visitor attraction showcasing a unique product and global brand and
will incorporate a rich heritage resource alongside a live factory working
environment. This project has the potential to be an iconic attraction for
Wales.”
Shane Bissett, Director of Commemorative Coin and
Bullion at The Royal Mint, said:
"The Royal Mint is a highly secure, Ministry of
Defence-protected site which is not usually open to the public, with the
exception of very special occasions and by invitation only. We receive
large numbers of requests to visit from members of the public every year and
have been exploring the opportunity of a visitor centre for some time. It gives
us great pleasure to announce that this can now go ahead, and that people will
be able to come here and see the work of one of Britain’s national
treasures.
“The visitor centre will enable us to take people
behind the scenes of over 1,000 years of coin making history, to demonstrate
our long-standing heritage and craftsmanship, and the innovation that harnesses
state-of-the-art technology to achieve the highest standard of minting. We
supply circulating and commemorative coins, as well as medals, to more than 60
different countries and as such we believe the new centre has the potential to
draw visitors from all over the world."