more scottish property news
Scottish house prices rise (slightly) as UK crashes
Clydebank Housing Development to be expanded
Scots house prices buck national trend
Single Surveys set to become law
500 new homes for Ruchill in Glasgow
Scottish house prices outstrip the UK in 2007
Scottish house prices to keep on rising
House prices in Scotland rise 7.1%
Gradual slowdown predicted in “robust” Scottish housing market
Scotland to escape UK housing market gloom
Aberdeen & Edinburgh break £200,000 house price barrier
60% jump in househunters turned down for mortgages
Scottish estate agency goes carbon neutral !
Tenants allowed to check their landlord
Scottish Rural House Prices Double
Scotland's home prices break the £140k barrier
Scottish housing boom set to slow
House buyers pay for extra room
Property prices still rising fast in Edinburgh and Aberdeen
Scots house prices race upwards at double UK rate
Price gap between Scotland and England closes
Scotland heads annual house price rises
Herald's new guide reveals houses for sale under £50,000
New survey confirms Scottish house prices rising faster
Scots house prices rise at twice UK average
House prices rising fastest in Scotland
Warning as UK property prices rise 8.2%
The shape of New Build to come
Major council plans for Dalkeith housing
A country house near to the city
Number of £1m homes soars over 100 mark
House prices set for soft landing
Pace of house price rises on the increase
Scots still have hottest properties
Stylish place to work, rest and play
Population decline to hit house prices
English home buyers head north
Luxury Estate planned for South Glasgow
500 new homes for Ruchill in Glasgow
© The HeraldOriginally published: 08.01.2008
The site of a vacant Victorian hospital which has lain derelict for over a decade will see the development of more than 500 new homes.
Two major housebuilders are to tie up the acquisition of the 40-acre former Ruchill Hospital in Glasgow this month before embarking on the £50m development.
The plans involve the restoration and refurbishment of some key listed buildings on the site of the former infectious diseases hospital, including the landmark A-listed red brick tower which dominates the skyline to the north of the city.
Gladedale and Bellway, the developers behind the plans, have billed it as one of the most significant new housing projects in Glasgow over the next five years with homes for first-time buyers an integral part of the scheme.
Many in the area had hoped that any scheme on the hospital site would have included social accommodation and had mounted a campaign in support of the idea.
However, the rapid escalation of land prices in the Ruchill area has put the development beyond the price range of most of the housing associations.
In the past few years, the district, generally considered one of Glasgow's most deprived areas, has witnessed an upturn in fortunes with some high-profile canalside developments proving popular with buyers, while former industrial sites have also been transformed into housing.
Tenement properties have also been demolished and a social housing rebuilding programme is under way in parts of Ruchill.
A planning application for the project is to be submitted early this year and it is hoped that work will begin on-site in 2009.
Ruchill Hospital, which closed in 1999 and has been marketed by Scottish Enterprise, was opened in 1900 as an infectious disease hospital by Princess Christian, a daughter of Queen Victoria.
It includes 13 listed and one non-listed building.
The Ruchill development will be the third hospital site redevelopment project undertaken by Gladedale in the west of Scotland this year.
The company, which is one of the UK's largest private housebuilders, has also acquired two other landmark sites, Broomhill Hospital in Kirkintilloch and the former Law Hospital near Carluke in Lanarkshire.
The £50m Broomhill scheme will result in the refurbishment of the listed building, which dates back to the late 1800s, to create 13 apartments, while the rest of the site will become more than 180 three, four and five-bedroom family homes.
A planning application for the scheme is imminent and it is hoped work will also start on site in early 2009.
The company has already secured detailed planning permission for a £100m project including 500 homes at the former Law Hospital in Carluke.
The five-year redevelopment plan will see the former hospital, which closed in 2001, replaced with two, three, four and five-bedroom homes, as well as some local shopping facilities, while the developers have expressed a commitment to contributing to a park and ride facility at Carluke railway station.
Work is expected to start on-site by spring.
Crawford Copstick, managing director of Gladedale (Central Scotland) Ltd, said, Ruchill was one of the largest brownfield development sites to become available in Scotland in recent years.
He said: "This is an outstanding regeneration opportunity and our development will play a key role in the continuing revitalisation of this part of North Glasgow. We are committed to maintaining the existing character of these historical developments and at Ruchill Hospital we propose to find a new use for the historic A-listed tower and plan to work with the local community to achieve this."
Ann McKechin, Glasgow North MP, had supported the calls for an element of social housing on the site but said she welcomed progress on the long-time vacant grounds.
She said: "No-one wants the site to remain derelict and I would have wanted social housing here but land prices in part have prevented that happening.
"But I still hope that more land can be unlocked for further social housing developments."


