Garden Sheds - 1st Choice

Collection of industrial buildings to receive a long-awaited makeover

10:01:20 13th January 2011

A collection of historic industrial buildings in Scotland are to be regenerated in a £5.4 million overhaul.

Shortcut to Capital Steel Farm Buildings

The sugar shed warehouses in Inverclyde are an internationally recognised landmark, praised by Prince Charles and recognised by the World Monuments Fund and UNESCO as one of the 100 most endangered sites in the world, reports the Scotsman.

The structures will become home to a mixed-use development including a restaurant and museum, states the newspaper.

Principal inspector of buildings for Historic Scotland Ranald McInnes told the Scotsman the sugar warehouses are an integral part of the country's history and was pleased a new use had been found for them.

"It is a very, very important part of industrial archaeology, and it's fantastic to see it saved," he said.

The long-awaited project forms part of an ambitious £180 million master-plan to develop Inverclyde's historic James Watt dock by urban regeneration company Riverside Inverclyde.

The development, which has received planning permission, will include the construction of over 1,000 homes, a hotel and a marina with combined workshop.

Find out more information about industrial buildingsADNFCR-2655-ID-19554304-ADNFCR


  Written by Robin Antill+ Started making garden sheds in 1979. so 31 years experience. Online since 1996. 1st in UK.

Related Articles
Scottish farmers are facing hefty bills for replacing agricultural buildings severely damaged by snow. The National Beef Association (NBA) is now appealing to cabinet secretary Richard Lochhead for a national emergency fund to be created, in a bid to minimise the potential economic damage to many farms. Collapsed cattle...read more
A man in Iowa in the US has created a small business making and selling toy barns that are miniature versions of the farm buildings seen in the state. John Kauffman told Farm-News.com that he likes to drive around the state's countryside as looking at its variety of barns provides him with inspiration for the toys...read more
A boar farmer has been granted permission to temporarily keep farm buildings on his land. Alan Dedames lives at the Wild Boar Woodland, in West Anstey near the Devonshire town of Tiverton. The 43-year-old has been battling for five years to keep a worker's dwelling and farm buildings on the land after suspected animal...read more