Then
NowGoat Street has mostly disappeared from the map, but old views place it back into the city-centre story.
The value of a then and now story is that it makes change visible. With Goat Street, Princess Way and a vanished line through town, the older view gives the street a sense of weight, while the present view shows what has survived, what has moved and what has been smoothed out by redevelopment.
The point is not nostalgia for its own sake. A comparison like this helps readers notice the scale of change: street widths, building lines, shopfronts, traffic, signs and the small pieces of public space that decide how a place feels.
Old photographs can be blunt evidence. They show where people stood, what they looked towards and what the camera thought was important. The modern image then asks a different question: what would someone from that older scene still recognise today?
One reason Goat Street, Princess Way and a vanished line through town still works as a story is that readers can place it on a map. Local history becomes stronger when it can be walked, photographed, compared and argued over by people who know the ground.
The before-and-after view works because it slows the street down. Instead of treating Then and now as just somewhere to pass through, it asks what has been kept, what has been covered over and what still shapes the route today.
The older view is useful even when the exact buildings have gone. Shopfronts, rooflines, street widths and the position of a junction can all help place a memory back on the ground.
The modern photograph matters just as much. It shows the ordinary present, with traffic, signs and pavements where people still move through the same piece of town without always noticing the older layer underneath.
The subject also shows why Swansea street history should not be left only to official landmarks. The ordinary view is often where the best evidence survives, because that is where daily life kept repeating itself.
There will always be gaps in a visual record. A later photograph may not stand in the exact spot, and an older one may leave questions unanswered, but the pair still helps turn a vanished corner into something people can discuss.
That is often how the next piece of information appears. Someone remembers a shop name, a bus stop, a family business or a shortcut, and the comparison becomes a starting point rather than a finished answer.
Old photographs can make change feel abrupt, but in places like Then and now it usually happened in layers. A shop closed, a frontage changed, a road was widened, a building was patched, and only later did the whole scene begin to feel like another town.
That kind of memory is especially valuable in Then and now, where redevelopment has sometimes left only fragments of the older scene. Even a small clue can help rebuild the story of a corner, building or route.
