By Paul Scott, Multimedia Editor

I promised in an earlier blog that I would try to stir up a little debate by producing some top 10s and I've decided to start with my favourite Gwynedd landmarks.
Having lived in the county for 10 years now I feel I've got to know the place well but I'm absolutely certain I will miss out some of your favourites so make sure you post them here.
Just use the "add comments" facility below and tell everyone your top 10. And if you think I'm talking out of my proverbial, feel free to tell me!
I'm starting my countdown at number 10 and I've chosen Penrhyn Castle.
Controversial for its past associations I know, but it is the castle's history that makes it such an important Gwynedd landmark.
The building was transformed between 1820 and 1845 from being a fortified manor house into the Norman-style folly we see today.
The work was carried out by Thomas Hooper for the Pennants who nororiously made a fortune out of slate, sugar and slavery.
Queen Victoria once stayed there, it houses an incredible collection of art (including a Rembrandt) and boasts one of the most beautiful gardens in North Wales.
It was built on the hard labours of slaves in Jamaca and quarrymen in Bethesda and its imposing stature suggests the Pennant family wished to shove their wealth down the throats of their local employees.
Just look from the village of Talybont and see how dominant it is on the landscape.
But no-one is more pleased than me to say that the quarry workers outdid Penrhyn 66 years after it was finished with a landmark of their own that is even more in your face.
While Penrhyn is a relic of a bygone age - a mere tourist attraction - the quarrymen's landmark continues to play a vital role in the life of Bangor.
You'll just have to wait to find out what I'm talking about as that landmark is at number nine.
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