The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Columbariu­m among new cemetery plans

kinghorn: Group seeks to create final resting place in woodland including repository for urns

- aileen robertson arobertson@thecourier.co.uk

Fife could be home to Scotland’s first columbariu­m as part of plans for a woodland cemetery in Kinghorn.

Kinghorn Community Land Associatio­n (KCLA) is behind the proposal for the repository for cremation urns.

The group has purchased 10 acres of land next to the Ecology Centre.

It plans to create a woodland cemetery, which would be the first of its kind in Fife, including a wildflower meadow and a hilltop congregati­on area.

Run as a social enterprise, the project also aims to provide a wildlife habitat and benefit the environmen­t with the use of biodegrada­ble coffins.

“It’s an incredibly exciting project for Kinghorn,” said KCLA chairman Richard Brewster.

“There is a real shortage of cemetery space in Kinghorn and making these proposals a reality will provide an opportunit­y for people to have somewhere special to lay loved ones to rest.

“The cemetery will develop into a natural woodland and peaceful remembranc­e space with wildflower meadow and spectacula­r views over the Forth.

“The idea for the columbariu­m is based on an Iron Age barrow – a hollow mound with passages within it, with a central walled area somewhat like a broch, and a path that leads from the higher celebratio­n platform.”

There are only three similar columbaria in the UK, and this would be the first in Scotland.

KCLA commission­ed Edinburghb­ased architects Simpson and Brown to design the structure, and the firm worked with the community on the plans.

Mr Brewster added: “We’ve had great feedback from all the consultati­on we’ve done so far, including formal support from Kinghorn Community Council, and we need to build on that momentum.”

John Sanders, lead architect at Simpson Brown, said the interior of the columbariu­m would be like an ancient tomb, similar to Maeshowe in Orkney.

He said: “The columbariu­m will have over 600 niches with each niche containing up to six urns allowing families to be interred together.

“We think that the result will be a unique and a characterf­ul building.”

 ?? Pictures: Steven Brown. ?? Ann McIlravie, Peter Lindow and Karen Dundas in the field which is being proposed as a site for a new eco cemetery and columbariu­m at Kinghorn.
Pictures: Steven Brown. Ann McIlravie, Peter Lindow and Karen Dundas in the field which is being proposed as a site for a new eco cemetery and columbariu­m at Kinghorn.
 ??  ?? An artist’s impression of what the interior of the proposed columbariu­m at Kinghorn will look like.
An artist’s impression of what the interior of the proposed columbariu­m at Kinghorn will look like.

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