Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Paul Behan

First pictures revealed of new community hub to be built near Ayr's 'ghost' tower block

New pictures have today emerged of the community hub that will service future residents at Ayr’s riverside flats development.

Ayrshire Live can exclusively reveal that the new hub will be ‘repositioned’ next to the last remaining tower block at Riverside Place - but slightly reduced in length - following recent ‘difficulties’ with the overall project.

Acting in the planning proposal are LMA Architects who say the hub, which is intended to replace a portable cabin previously used by residents, will be a “bespoke unit,” for use of residents only, with;

* communal meeting space

* a smaller private meeting space, plus

* additional support offices for caretakers and service staff for the residents and the accommodation.

In their planning and design statement LMA Architects said: “The unit is designed in the context of future residential development for the site, currently in development, to provide facilities similar to what is currently contained within the portable cabins, as well as further required supporting infrastructure for the overall residential development.

“A communal gathering space and residents hub is proposed for the residents of Riverside Place, in the form of a stand-alone single storey pavilion building.

“The proposed building would be located adjacent to the future block, part of a long term replacement of the existing towers with new flats for which the council has development rights for under residential-use protocol.

“The location allows the hub to be placed closer to the river walkway, a significant distance from the vacant remaining tower to allow future demolition offsets, while feeling like a part of the overall development.

Aerial shot of where the new hub will be positioned in context to the wider development (LMA Architects)

“The pavilion orientation follows the logic of the broader design intent, sitting angled to the river and set back from it, on a relatively flat area on site.

“This also allows for its own external open space. The footprint has been kept minimal, to appear as an ancillary building and structure.”

The new hub will be for residents only (LMA Architects)

Plans for the hub were already approved by South Ayrshire Council back in 2021.

However, the plans, at the time, were based on all three tower blocks coming down to make way for a new batch of social housing.

Two of the famous tower blocks were bulldozed before Christmas as part of the work to build new social housing.

But officials slammed on the brakes at the third and final skyscraper - due to phone masts they cannot remove from the top of the tower.

Ayrshire Live told last year how talks took place, aimed at ripping the masts from the top of the block, which belong to telecoms giant EE.

The firm was set to receive an inflated pay-off to quit their long term lease on the site.

But those negotiations stalled – with EE standing firm on the historic contract which grants them access to the plot until 2025.

Demolition of two of the high flats took place in December (Alasdair MacLeod/Ayrshire Post)

The impasse prompted a fierce political debate with local councillors playing the 'blame game' over why the masts issue wasn't identified at an earlier date.

And last month we told how the possibility of Ukrainian war refugees being housed in the ghost tower left behind was mooted - with bosses at South Ayrshire Council going cap in hand to the Scottish Government seeking money to salvage the doomed block.

In terms of the proposed new homes, a scaled down version of the project will see 75 homes built in the shadow of the remaining tower - instead of the 96 originally planned.

The proposals for the new community centre/hub are currently listed as ‘pending consideration’ on South Ayrshire Council’s online planning portal.

LMA Architects said: “Planning approval for the unit has already been obtained with a subsequent NMA (Non Material Amendment) confirmed for a slight reduction of its length.

“The current proposals are as per the approved scheme in overall design, with the only notable change being its repositioning in context, due to one of the towers under demolition being temporarily retained until its future can be resolved, and the site and future development reconfigured to suit.”

Don't miss the latest Ayrshire headlines – sign up to our free daily newsletter here

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.