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Real monarch of the glen's dream to restore way of life

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Published Date: 06 August 2008
THE Prince of Wales yesterday launched an ambitious scheme aimed at breathing new life into more than 1,000 redundant buildings scattered across the far north of Scotland.
In the first stage of the project a total of 1,343 buildings in Caithness have been catalogued by Andrew Wright, a former President of the Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland.

The detailed inventory of the disused traditional buildings i
n the area – from empty churches to former farm bothies – will be used to identify their economic potential and the skills and resources required for their restoration.

And Prince Charles, speaking at the launch at the Castle of Mey yesterday, said: "It would be verging on the criminal to allow the built heritage to drift away."

The prince, who has expressed the hope that the groundbreaking scheme could become the model for the regeneration of disused buildings throughout the entire Highland region and beyond, said: "I suspect many of you will express astonishment at the number of these remarkable buildings dotted over this remarkable landscape.

"I happen to believe in the enormous economic and social potential of bringing back to life buildings which have so long lain dormant."

The new initiative to enhance the use of heritage buildings in the area is the third phase of the North Highland Initiative (NHI), launched three years ago by Prince Charles to promote and develop the economies of rural communities in Caithness.

The new regeneration programme is to be spearheaded by the Prince's Foundation for the Built Environment and The Prince's Regeneration Trust. The Foundation is an educational charity which seeks to improve the quality of people's lives by teaching "timeless and ecological" ways of planning, designing and building.

And the prince's Regeneration Trust, which specialises in the preservation and regeneration of at-risk buildings of architectural or heritage value, has already been active in Scotland for several years.

Lord MacLennan, the chairman of the NHI, said the survey had shown that Caithness was home to a vast array of "unique" and historic buildings ranging from farm bothies to ice houses, grain stories and churches which deserved to be preserved.

He said: "It is a unique heritage because they are unlike buildings in any other part of Scotland because of the nature of the materials used and the way they were used by local builders who had high levels of skills and craftsmanship.

"Many of these buildings are not listed by Historic Scotland and one of the purposes of the survey and the accompanying report is to draw widespread attention to the value of the built heritage which isn't protected. Many of these buildings are at risk and if we don't move fairly quickly what you would be left with are mounds of stone."

A spokeswoman for the initiative said: "The report identifies those features which are unique to the area.

"The vernacular heritage in Caithness is unique, is a diminishing resource, and is currently at considerable risk."

The report makes 50 recommendations for the potential regeneration of the buildings including the establishment of a programme with objectives, priorities, timescales and budgets.





The full article contains 528 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 05 August 2008 8:13 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
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Kate,

Zurich 06/08/2008 07:50:48
By the way, who is the Prince of Wales, when in Scotland...this should be an article about the Duke of Rothesay!
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Douglas,

Bathgate 06/08/2008 08:37:14
Surely if there was enormous economic and social potential in these buildings they wouldn't be vacant and unused.
The man's clearly casting about for something to do with his time.
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Beth Boyle,

NY 06/08/2008 09:34:31
I am glad the Duke is doing this. He is a good man.
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Jacqueline Hyde ,

On the shelf 06/08/2008 09:42:34
#13
Very true.

Most of these empty buildings are unused because their economic or structural viability has disappeared. However it is a tribute to their builders and their owners that they have outlived their usefulness for so long. (Can we say the same about the PoW/DoR?)

The main problems lie in the inertia of the planning system and the policies of Historic Scotland and the buildings only exist today thanks to the reluctance of farmers and lairds to demolish them.
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Yok Finney,

Ross-shire 06/08/2008 09:44:11
duramadoo my daddy O
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Montford's Jaicket,

Hanging around 06/08/2008 15:16:33
Good on ya Charlie boy; next time I'm around Castle of Mey I'll drop off a trowel and a shovel so you can get started. Renovating that many buildings should keep you busy for a few months.

What's that? He wasn't proposing actually doing any of the work himself? Ah... my mistake.
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Yok Finney,

Ross-shire 06/08/2008 18:04:17
the night we went to Rothesay O
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Sinklier,

06/08/2008 21:18:53
I think this is a great idea! How old are these buildings? Could they not be repaired and rented out either to live in or as holiday cottages?

Are there a lot of paperwork and laws preventing people from doing things with these buildings?

 

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