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September 23, 2015

Boost for Beith

Some communities just seem to get on a roll with one success leading to another. Fresh from scooping the Celebrating Communities Award at this year’s Scottish Charity Awards, Beith Community Development Trust have heard they’ve been successful in their application to the Scottish Land Fund for half a million pounds to help in the acquisition and development of an important community asset – the 5.24 hectare site comprising Geilsland House and School Campus. This enterprising development trust have plans to boost their local economy through the creation of business units and a training complex.


 

A Scottish Charity Award winner is celebrating once more after being awarded over half a million pounds to fund its latest project.

Beith Community Development Trust (BCDT) received £512,000 from the Scottish Land Fund, to turn a former residential school into a community hub.

BCDT, which won the Celebrating Communities award at the 2015 Scottish Charity Awards, will use the cash to buy the 5.24 hectare Geilsland House and School Campus in the North Ayrshire town.

It plans to transform the site in a bid to boost the local economy by creating a number of business incubator units and training centre as well as providing accommodation.

Jane Lamont, development manager at BCDT, said: “Geilsland Campus is a beautiful and important community asset not only for Beith but also North Ayrshire.

We are genuinely thrilled about the scope and opportunities that will now become a reality

“To own it as a community is beyond what we once thought was possible.

“We are genuinely thrilled about the scope and opportunities that will now become a reality.

“It’s been an empowering process for the whole community.”

The Scottish Land Fund is an awards programme funded by the Scottish Government and delivered in partnership with by the Big Lottery Fund and Highlands and Islands Enterprise.

Its purpose is to help rural communities buy and manage local land and assets.

Six other community groups have also been awarded funding in the latest round of awards.

These include an award of £224,000 for Glengarry Community Woodlands, which will be used to bring 30 hectares of woodland in Inverness-shire into community ownership; to an award of £28,200 for Stratherrick and Foyers Community Trust to buy a patch of land within Lower Foyers to create a village green.

Scottish Land Fund Committee Chair, John Watt, said: “From a dynamic forestry buyout in Aberdeenshire to the creation of a valuable tourist attraction in Scourie, these awards will help to deliver social, environmental and economic benefits for generations to come.

“Each of today’s seven successful groups has worked hard to get to this point and I wish them all every success as they take forward their innovative plans.”

Minister for land reform, Aileen McLeod, added: “These projects, together with the wider Scottish Government work on land reform, through both the Community Empowerment Act, and the land reform bill, will support the Scottish Government aim of bringing more land into community ownership by 2020.

“I am looking forward to watching these communities thrive as they develop the land on which they live and work to realise their goals and ambitions.”