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New allotments set to take root alongside city tram line

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Published Date: 12 June 2009
LAND along the city's new tram route is being lined up to tackle an Edinburgh-wide shortage of allotments.
Council chiefs have identified plots along the tram route which can be turned into the green spaces once the tram project is completed in 2011.

Existing allotments at Carricknowe Golf Course and Stenhouse Drive will be extended under the plans, w
hile a new site next to the Stenhouse allotments has also been identified.

The size of the plots that will be turned over for allotments will not be known until the tram line is finished and all of its boundaries are in place.

However, land near Balgreen Primary School at Pansy Walk, which had originally been earmarked for allotments, will be sold off as it is one of five sites the council intends to sell to raise £10 million towards the tram scheme.

More than 1,400 people are on the council's allotment waiting list, with fewer than 90 getting land each year.

The waiting lists vary from plot to plot over the city, with the most popular sites attracting waits of up to seven years.

Money has been set aside to create the allotments and the new sites have today been welcomed by green groups.

Gavin Corbett of the Shandon Local Food group, which encourages people in the west of the city to grow their own food, said: "We know there is a lot of pressure on our existing allotment space so anything that can go someway to addressing the waiting list has got to be welcomed.

"At the height of the property boom there was an immense pressure on allotment sites but we hope with the changing market then the council will see the benefit of freeing up sites like this for allotment use."

The existing allotments at Stenhouse were created in the late 1990s to replace plots at Pansy Walk and Carricknowe which had been earmarked for the failed CERT rapid bus scheme planned for the west of the city.

The Capital has the longest waiting lists in Scotland according to the Scottish Allotment Gardens Society.

The city's most popular site is Inverleith, on East Fettes Avenue, where 304 people are waiting for plots.

Midmar Allotments, near Blackford Hill, is the second most popular with 100-plus on its list.

A council spokesman said: "We are currently drawing up a detailed allotment strategy for Edinburgh.

"On gaining planning permission and transferring these sites over, we would ensure that we maximised the number and quality of the plots available for people to cultivate and enjoy."



Page 1 of 1

 
1

Icebreaker,

newbridge 12/06/2009 12:10:07
A positive Tram story but I'll bet that some tram whinger will pour cold water on it.
2

Skip McClendon,

12/06/2009 12:11:49
But are they "world class" allotments? Will tourists flock from all over the world to have their picture taken next to them? I'm sure an informational napkin will soon be issued at great expense to answer such questions.
3

Icebreaker,

newbridge 12/06/2009 12:12:51
What did I say?
4

Skip McClendon,

12/06/2009 12:18:14
#3

I didn't mention trams. Are you paranoid?
5

Peter - very disappointed/concerned,

Edinburggh 12/06/2009 12:23:39
#1 Icebreaker

The numpty Greens are bound to query this due to possible dangers from the electric fields generated by passing trams should this ridiculous 'project' ever be completed.

Query, what would be charged for crops based on the cost of the trams £20,000 per kg?
6

GraemeH,

Edinburgh 12/06/2009 12:28:13
#1 - Is it actually a positive story? What it says is that some new allotments will be created whilst other land previously earmarked for allotments will be sold off to pay for the vanity tram.

It is unclear whether there will be more or less allotments in place that if the vanity tram was not proceeding.

However for the £700m or so being wasted on the tram we could have had a heck of a lot of allotments!
7

Jams,

Edinburgh 12/06/2009 12:30:37
It is perhaps a function of local government thinking that they are destroying a set of allotments at Pansy Walk in order to create them somewhere else and calling it an expansion.

The Pansy Walk site was earmarked for the orginal tram route and closed on that basis. The tram has now relocated to the other side of the railway track at the behest of the SRU so why does it not revert to allotments? Could it be because the council think can sell this strip of land for development?

A new housing development at Pansy Walk would put pressure on an already undersized access and increase traffic levels next to the primary school. As for the poor souls who buy or rent there, the will have the main railway line as there immediate neighbour with no tree belt to mask the noise.

Please note icebreaker this is not an anti-tram response it is recording the demise of yet another green space in Edinburgh at the whim of the council.
8

Old Cartha Boy,

12/06/2009 13:11:39
"A council spokesman said: "We are currently drawing up a detailed allotment strategy for Edinburgh."

This really best use of CEC's time and our money?
9

Jamesbuchanan66,

12/06/2009 13:28:03
Hurrah for the trams, now I can grow cabbage
10

love2moan,

12/06/2009 13:35:06
CEC can turn the whole route into allotments by 2012, it's not as if anyone is actually going to use the tram is it? That'll be the next waste of money - need to move the utilities back to get water to my crops.....bring the diggers back in - I can't plant my carrots in concrete!
11

alfonsa pedrosa,

embra 12/06/2009 13:39:00
I hope the passengers on the trams wont be able to reach out and pinch some tatties.
12

Bill MacD,

12/06/2009 13:40:30
It's wonderful how the diehard anti tram whingers will ALWAYS find some angle to spew out their ludicrous ignorant bile. Nice try 8 & 9.
13

Mallory,

Edinburgh 12/06/2009 13:42:25
Princes Street would look a lot better if is were filled with allotments. Think of the job creation opportunities offered by fresh veggies and fruits.
14

Jingsitsme,

EDINBURGH 12/06/2009 13:52:13
Well as long as no more in Lady Road under Peter - little hitler all will be welcome.
15

David55,

12/06/2009 13:57:53
Peter - very disappointed/concerned,Edinburggh 12/06/2009 12:23:39
#1 Icebreaker

The numpty Greens are bound to query this due to possible dangers from the electric fields generated by passing trams should this ridiculous 'project' ever be completed.

Query, what would be charged for crops based on the cost of the trams £20,000 per kg

-------------------------------------------------------

In the Evening News tomorrow - Frankenstein vegetables to be created by evil trams, nasty electricity.

I've not heard much about the trams or seen much work on them. Are they still going to be up and running by 2011?
16

Peter - very disappointed/concerned,

Edinburgh 12/06/2009 14:12:20
#16 David55

"Are they still going to be up and running by 2011?"

I think we can safely bet that there will have been several harvests from these allotments before (if ever) the trams service gets started.

Personally I'm hoping (indeed praying) that the trams fail and have to be cancelled (just to keep Bill MacD happy).
17

spadger,

Embra 12/06/2009 14:14:38
Strange that they did not mention the allotments recently built at Greendykes - at a rather large 4 figure expence (for the residents??).
Waiting lists - no!
Why - they have all been taken up by council employees.
Nice use of our taxpaying money
18

PaulB,

Edinburgh 12/06/2009 14:19:43
#17 - are you always so cheery? Must be what keeps you going. Trying posting a positive response on the site for a change!
19

Peter - very disappointed/concerned,

Edinburgh 12/06/2009 14:23:30
#19 PaulB

Obviously my message is getting through - believe me there's nothing positive about:
(a) the trams,
(b) tram supporters.
20

,

12/06/2009 14:27:21
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
21

Foo,

12/06/2009 14:31:57
Cheer up Peter, the trams might never happen (they will) and you've the weekend to enjoy soon (you wont, you'll be thinking about the trams)
22

Peter - very disappointed/concerned,

Edinburgh 12/06/2009 14:34:23
#21 & #22

Sorry guys, you're both wrong but thanks for the 'feedback' and have a nice weekend yourselves.
23

Paula McGuire,

12/06/2009 14:44:03
dont alotments get wrecked by chavs?
24

Old Cartha Boy,

12/06/2009 15:12:14
Re #13 - sorry? Where does the word "tram" appear in my post?

25

Foo,

12/06/2009 15:49:17
25

"A council spokesman said: "We are curren-T-ly d-R-A-wing up a detailed allot-M-ent strategy for Edinburgh."

TRAM

26

Peter - very disappointed/concerned,

Edinburgh 12/06/2009 15:57:35
#26 Foo,

How about TRAM: "Tatties Really Are Magic".

27

Foo,

12/06/2009 16:49:17
Or:

Trams Really Are Magic
28

Artemis,

12/06/2009 19:08:43
#18 - what a load of compost. The new Greendykes allotments are for tenants, and one of the concierges helps out. Staff looking for allotments go on the same waiting list as everyone else.

As for the council spokesman saying the council is drawing up an allotment strategy - they already have one, it's a few years old and as far as I can see they haven't met any of its objectives.
29

supachick ,

edinburgh 12/06/2009 20:26:29
lets forget the trams when the 100 airlink from LRT goes so that they force people to use the tram then first/stagecoach can put in there service cheaper and bankrupt LRT as for the allotments let us use all the golf courses
30

Sqidward,

12/06/2009 20:57:30
I hope the trams will have ploughs on the sides. It's only logical, for the sake of the tatties, don't you know.

 

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