Driving Lessons Splott can offer Intensive courses for those that want to pass quickly. We are unlike other Intensive courses in Splott who offer this as you most probably will not have to take time off work, if we can help it.

Our Intensive courses in Splott and surrounding areas are affordable. Do we offer cheap driving courses we are often asked. We offer value for money and deliver.

Areas Main Town Splott

Adamsdown, Butetown, Caerau, Canton, Castle, Cathays, Cyncoed, Ely, Fairwater, Gabalfa, Grangetown, Heath, Lisvane, Llandaff, Llandaff North, Llanedeyrn, Llanishen, Llanrumney, Old St Mellons, Pentwyn, Pentyrch, Penylan, Pontcanna, Pontprennau, RadyrMorganstown , Riverside, Roath Plasnewydd, Rumney, Splott, St Fagans, Tongwynlais, Thornhill, Tremorfa, Trowbridge, Whitchurch

Should I take an Intensive driving course?

If you want to Pass quickly then taking an Intensive Driving Course is a great idea. According to the DvSA  the average number of hours from zero to test standard is 45 hours.

Unlike a lot of Intensive courses you do not need to have passed the theory before starting the course, another great advantage to speed the process up.

They are also a good idea if you have got halfway through your driving training and need to get this done FAST.

A lot of Intensive Driving schools have you sit in the car for 6-7 hours. Not good for a learner’s learning curve. We have found that the sweet spot of learning is between 2-4 hours.

You will potentially save money by doing one as you are not going over the same ground covered the week before. Very much like reading a book once a week, you have to go back a few pages to remember where you were.

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More Information about Splott

Splott (Welsh: Y Sblot) is a district and community in the south of the city of Cardiff, capital of Wales, just east of the city centre. It was built up in the late 19th century on the land of two farms of the same name: Upper Splott and Lower Splott Farms. Splott is characterised by its once vast steelworks and rows of tightly knit terraced houses. The suburb of Splott falls into the Splott electoral ward.

Fanciful suggestions for the origin of the name have included a truncation of “God’s Plot”, as the land belonged to the Bishop of Llandaff in medieval times, and a derivation of plat, meaning a grassy area of land. The name of the original farm would seem to be Middle English “splott”, from Old English (speck, blot, patch of land) and the word is to be found in other English place names in the Vale of Glamorgan, Gower, and Pembrokeshire, as well as in Somerset and Devon, in the West Country of England, from where it was presumably introduced by English settlers. It has frequently been noted on lists of unusual place names.[1]