The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Games On: Former Pictavia centre to become soft play area.

BRECHIN: Exciting plans will breathe new life into former Pictavia building

- RICHARD WATT riwatt@thecourier.co.uk

A former Angus tourist attraction once thought “doomed” will be brought back to life for families.

The £1.2 million Pictavia Visitor Centre near Brechin opened in 1999 as a means to preserve the story of the Picts.

But it closed 15 years later as the failing centre was said to be “doomed from the start”.

Now new owner Brechin Castle Centre Ltd has been given permission to redevelop the centre as a soft play area for children.

This would run in tandem with the adjacent garden centre, which council planners believe will bolster the area’s attraction as a tourist destinatio­n.

According to agents Pleydell Smithman, the “exciting and unusual” treehouse play area would welcome a new generation of little soldiers.

For the local authority, case officer Neil Duthie commented the centre would have to be run in

Attracting families to garden centres is important as the traditiona­l garden centre customer base is changing.

KATHRYN FARDEN

tandem with the garden centre.

“It would not be viable to relocate an entire garden centre to an alternativ­e site closer to a town centre in order to achieve a very modest change of use of an existing building,” he states.

“In order to achieve the results intended by the planning applicatio­n, our clients would need to consider sites that could accommodat­e the existing garden centre and the proposed developmen­t in its entirety.”

Consultant Kathryn Farden said the change of use would directly employ six people, with another 7.8 jobs possible for local suppliers as a consequenc­e of new business.

She said: “The site has become an establishe­d part of the local community and provides an important service for tourists to the wider east coast area.

“Garden centres have developed over time to offer a wide range of products and services from their sites over the years.

“Attracting families to garden centres is important as the traditiona­l garden centre customer base is changing.”

Two play zones will be created, one for toddlers and one for older children, both of which will include foam mats, play equipment and ball pit areas.

A coffee shop will be provided within the building to enable parents to purchase food and drinks while supervisin­g their children.

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 ??  ?? Pictavia is set for a new lease of life as a play centre for children.
Pictavia is set for a new lease of life as a play centre for children.

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