Local Government
Award-winning Saundersfoot sauna faces refusal over location concerns
PLANS to allow an award-winning outdoor sauna to remain permanently at Saundersfoot Harbour have been recommended for refusal by Pembrokeshire Coast National Park planners.
Hwyl Outdoor Sauna, run by Kerry Evans, was granted temporary two-year permission in June 2024 for a mobile wood-fired sauna at the harbour.
The business has since become a popular feature with residents, visitors and cold-water swimmers, and was named Sauna of the Year 2026/27 at the Wales Prestige Awards earlier this year.


Ms Evans has now applied to make the siting permanent, but officers are recommending refusal when the application goes before the National Park Authority’s development management committee on Tuesday, July 15.
A supporting statement submitted with the application said the sauna had “become a popular and valued amenity for both residents and visitors, offering a space focused on health, wellbeing and community connection”.
It added: “The overall sentiment within the village has been strongly supportive, with many residents recognising the sauna as a valuable asset that enhances the amenities in Saundersfoot.
“Hwyl Outdoor Sauna has received positive attention in regional and national press, helping to promote Saundersfoot as a destination for coastal wellbeing and outdoor experiences.
“Media coverage has highlighted the sauna as an example of the increasing popularity of sea swimming and sauna culture around the UK coastline.”
Saundersfoot Community Council has raised no objection to the application, and most of the 19 letters submitted by members of the public support the proposal.
Supporters have described the sauna as “a major asset to the village,” “a wellness landmark for Saundersfoot,” and “a unique offering that attracts visitors to the beach and harbour”.
However, some objectors have said that while they support permanent consent in principle, they do not believe the sauna should remain in its current position because it “obstructs the view of the beach from the promenade”.
In their report to committee members, National Park officers say the proposal, in its current form and location, would harm the setting of the Saundersfoot Conservation Area.
The report states: “The application, in its current form and with the proposed location of the sauna, is considered to result in a landscape impact that harms the setting of the Saundersfoot Conservation Area.
“The sauna is also located in a position which reduces public access along the existing promenade route, which is considered to prevent appropriate access from being achieved.
“In addition, since the temporary permission was granted, planning advice has been updated and there is now a requirement for a Flood Consequences Assessment in this location. The lack of a suitable Flood Consequences Assessment results in insufficient information to support the current application.”
Officers also note that the latest application includes additional development, including a booking office which has already been installed, meaning the overall scale of the proposal is greater than the scheme approved on a temporary basis in 2024.
The report adds: “Following consideration of the implementation of the temporary permission and given the greater extent of the current proposal, it is considered that the visual impact of the sauna and related booking office has now increased and could be reduced by locating the sauna further back in the car park.
“This would also have the benefit of the sauna not requiring relocation during severe weather and increased flood risk.”
The application is recommended for refusal on the grounds of visual impact, impact on the conservation area, reduced public access along the promenade, and the absence of a suitable Flood Consequences Assessment.
Committee members will make the final decision at the July 15 meeting.
Education
Ysgol Glannau Gwaun celebrates prestigious Gold Active Travel award
Pupils at Ysgol Glannau Gwaun have been celebrating after their school became one of only nine in Wales to achieve Gold Active Travel status
The Fishguard school recently travelled to the Senedd in Cardiff to receive its prestigious Walk, Wheel, Cycle Gold Active Travel Award, recognising the work pupils and staff have done to promote walking, cycling and scooting.
It was the second time pupils from Ysgol Glannau Gwaun had travelled to the capital to present their active travel projects to a range of audiences.
The school now has a fleet of 60 scooters and 40 bicycles, allowing children from Nursery through to Year 6 to build their confidence and skills.



Through a range of grants and funding opportunities, weekly cycling and scooter sessions are now offered to all pupils, regardless of age or ability.
In 2023, only 11 of 41 pupils were able to complete their Level 1 and 2 cycle training, as many did not have access to a bicycle.
Since then, the school has worked hard to change that. Thanks to investment in school bikes, every pupil can now take part in cycle training.
Older pupils have also taken on leadership roles, supporting younger children with balance bike and scooter sessions.
Progression Step 3 pupils have designed a 1.5km community scooter trail, beginning at Fishguard Library and finishing in Goodwick. The route has been created not only for pupils, but for the wider community.
To further encourage active travel, the school also loans scooters to families, helping to ensure everyone has the opportunity to take part.
Staff help run a walking bus to after-school music activities at the secondary school, while the School Senedd regularly develops new ideas to promote active travel.
One recent initiative was a six-hour scootathon, which raised £1,000 for the RNLI.
To mark the Gold award, the school held a special celebration day for all pupils. Fusion Extreme delivered BMX workshops, while British BMX champion Matti Hemmings impressed pupils with a spectacular display of skills.
Pupils also presented their journey to achieving Gold status to parents, governors and community partners, including Transition Bro Gwaun, which helped fund the school’s bicycle fleet.
Headteacher Mrs Mari Jones said: “I am incredibly proud of our pupils, whose enthusiasm, leadership and commitment have driven many of the initiatives that contributed to this award.”
Deputy Headteacher Mrs Sharon Osborne added: “We are extremely grateful to the Pembrokeshire Road Safety Team, Alice from the Walk, Wheel, Cycle Trust, Transition Bro Gwaun and the Catrin Vaughan Foundation for their support.
“Their funding and resources have enabled our pupils to develop exceptional cycling and scooting skills, alongside valuable leadership and communication skills.
“This has culminated in pupils confidently presenting their achievements to a wide range of audiences.”
Pupils say their active travel journey does not end with the Gold award, with more ideas already being planned.
As they proudly put it, nothing stands still at Ysgol Glannau Gwaun.
Local Government
More than £6.5m spent by council on housing in 6 months
PEMBROKESHIRE’S council has made 17 purchases of housing in various sizes and a building to be used as a children’s home, amounting to just over £6.5m in just six months.
At the July meeting of Pembrokeshire County Council’s Cabinet, members are asked to note a report covering acquisitions and disposals in excess of £100,000 which have completed between November 1 of 2025 and March 31 of this year.
It lists 18 separate groups of acquisitions, totalling £6,526,967, along with one disposal of the former contact centre, Argyle Street, Pembroke Dock, at £415,000.
For those purchases, grants have been secured to the tune of £6,440,179, the report says.
These acquisitions, all for housing stock in various sizes and amounts, are: 22 The Glebe, Tenby £200,000, with a grant of £119,419; 12 Gay Lane , Marloes, £180,000 (£129,728); 5 St Mary’s Road, Pembroke Dock £125,000 (£76,764); 51 Augustine Way, Haverfordwest £105,000 (£69,126); 82 Heywood Court, Tenby £115,000 (£87,633); 19 Maes Ewan, Solva £220,000 (£165,155); 29 Heol Penlan, Goodwick £132,000 (£86,393); 1 Churchill Close, Tenby £125,000 (£83,571); 3 Westaway Park, Rosemarket £142,000 (£93,134); 22 Churchill Close, Tenby £125,000 (£83,571); 31 Haroldston Close, Merlins Bridge £110,000 (£62,318); 28 Flemish Court, Lamphey £160,000 (£114,597); 7 Precelly Place, Milford Haven £125,000 (£81,578); 17 Newell Hill, Tenby 170,000 (£120,098).
Larger acquisitions are: 3 Rose Haven, The Beacon, Rosemarket, of four two-bed houses and six three-bed houses £2,601,967 (£1,725,179); 32, 33, 34 and 35 Harcourt Close, Hook four two-bed semis £864,000; 36 and 37 Harcourt Close, Hook two three-bed semis £552,000, with a grant of £2,821,760 covering 15 units in the case of the latter two.
An additional purchase of Sentry Cottage, Jordanston for a children’s residential home at £475,000, with a £580,152 grant is also listed.
Planning permission for that scheme was granted back in February.
Last November, Cabinet members heard a similar report, covering April 1 to October 31 of 2025, which included includes the purchase of 16 properties for housing stock, to the tune of £3,470,000 and the disposal of two industrial estate plots, at some £278,400.
Local Government
Site visit before Cosheston Carpenters Arms chimney decision
A DECISION on a £200,000 conversion of a Pembrokeshire village former public house, on which officers wanted to see removed chimneys reinstalled, has been given a breathing space so councillors can view the building.
In an application recommended for partial approval at the June 30 meeting of Pembrokeshire County Council’s planning committee, Craig Kidney sought permission for the removal of chimney stacks and construction of front porch and retaining garden wall at the former Carpenters Arms pub, Cosheston.
The application was for committee consideration as it has been made by or on behalf of a close family member of a member of the council.
It was previously due to be considered by committee in April and June, being withdrawn from both meetings.
It was subject to a split recommendation, approval for the porch and retaining wall, but refusal for the retrospective removal of the two chimney stacks on the basis “the removal of the chimney stacks has had a harmful impact on the character and appearance of this part of the Cosheston Conservation Area, creating harm to visual amenity and the historic environment”.
No objections had been received from Cosheston Community Council, but two letters of objection raised concerns including the impact of proposal on historic character and Conservation Area, and the changes being unauthorised.
Speaking at the meeting, agent Andrew Vaughan-Harries of Hayston Developments & Planning Ltd, who had only taken up the application the previous week, said the applicants were a teacher and plumber who had spent some £200,000 renovating the “run-down property,” the chimneys demolished after advice they were unsafe.
Mr Vaughan-Harries questioned the “legality” of the application forms, saying the paperwork accompanying the scheme was incorrect.
He also said that, while the two chimneys had been removed, there was “a great whopping” chimney at the rear, restored at a cost of some £5,000, adding that while “two wrongs don’t make a right” other chimneys had been “quietly” removed from properties in the conservation area without any objections; suggesting members attend a site visit to view the property prior to any decision.
Officers disputed the planning form was incorrect.
After debate on the merits or otherwise of chimneys in buildings in conservations areas, Cllr Simon Hancock, who is also Dr Simon Hancock curator of Haverfordwest Museum, said he had been reading around the importance in chimneys in a historical context.
Describing Cosheston as “one of the gems of south Pembrokeshire,” he said he had no problems with the conversion, but felt that “the chimney stacks ought to be replaced,” moving the split approval proposed.
At the behest of Cllr Tony Wilcox “in the interest of natural justice” where “99.9 per cent of the village had no issues whatsoever” with the removal of the chimney stacks, members voted for a site visit ahead of any formal decision, which was supported by seven votes to five.
-
Crime6 days agoDyfed-Powys Police rated only ‘Adequate’ in organised crime inspection
-
News4 days agoBiker dies and woman seriously injured in Black Mountain crash
-
Community5 days agoThousands line Cardigan streets for Lord Rhys homecoming parade
-
Crime6 days agoSwansea man jailed for 16 years after attacking vulnerable woman
-
Crime3 days agoEstate agent banned after drug-drive crash in Milford Haven
-
Local History7 days agoPembrokeshire man rode into history with Custer’s Last Stand
-
Local Government4 days agoFlood defence scheme moves closer as community invited to view plans
-
Community5 days agoCivic service brings Pembrokeshire towns together in Haverfordwest







