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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Jack Thomson

New flats planned in Renfrew as old training centre site eyed for makeover

Plans for a block of eight flats in Renfrew have been drawn up by architects and submitted to Renfrewshire Council.

The development has been earmarked for land on the corner of Fulbar Street and Blythswood Avenue in the centre of the town.

A combination of one and two-bedroom properties and eight private parking spaces have been proposed for the site.

An application for planning permission has been brought forward by site owner Brian Lees and Quigley Architects.

The location houses a commercial building at the moment, which the design statement says is now "vacant", having previously been used as an administration and training centre for Ailsa Care Services.

The architects' document explained: "The client wishes to improve the quality of the site, as the current building on the land does not provide full potential and does not sit coherently within its surroundings.

"It is hoped that by providing a historically sympathetic and carefully considered contemporary design solution that both preserves and enhances the area, our proposal can be viewed as a worthy addition to the urban development of Renfrew and as an example of how outdated sites can be developed harmoniously."

The area has a varied range of building types, sizes and architectural styles, which are mainly residential.

The architects have provided background detail on the site, which they have said originally hosted a Georgian villa built around the 1820s and one of the first developments on Fulbar Street.

But this was later demolished, alongside a Victorian tenement, in the second half of the 20th century before the construction of the current building in the 1970s.

According to the design statement, the planned development intends to "reflect the history and narrative of the site and reintroduce the urban scale previously lost".

It later added: "The whole project has been driven by informed research, which from the outset was sympathetic to the historical setting of the area.

"We believe that by allowing the new flatted development there will be significant benefit now and for future generations by preserving and enhancing the area and its setting within Renfrew.

"We therefore respectfully request that our detailed application for planning consent is granted."

The application will be determined at a later date.

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