The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Project to transform Kirkcaldy Esplanade could get under way next year.

Final piece in £1.4 million funding jigsaw to transform town’s landmark is agreed by councillor­s

- CLAIRE WARRENDER cwarrender@thecourier.co.uk

A long-awaited £1.4 million project to transform Kirkcaldy’s dilapidate­d waterfront could finally get under way in the spring.

Councillor­s have agreed to allocate the final piece in the funding jigsaw to pave the way towards changing the Esplanade from a busy traffic-filled thoroughfa­re to an attractive leisure area.

The first step will be to reduce the road layout from two lanes in each direction to just one between Tolbooth Street and the Port Brae. That would leave more room for parking, pop-up businesses, cafes and an outdoor gym.

The aim is to make the most of what is arguably Kirkcaldy’s best natural asset, currently used as a route through the town by drivers who rarely stop there.

It has been hailed as ambitious yet deliverabl­e after decades of “outrageous and unmanageab­le” schemes being put forward and coming to nothing.

The public have been urged to get behind the proposals, which will go out for consultati­on later this month before a formal planning applicatio­n is submitted.

Labour

This has been 10 years in the making by this area committee but prior to that people were progressin­g plans for the waterfront that I would describe as outrageous

councillor Neil Crooks, convener of Kirkcaldy area committee, said: “Part of the culture of Kirkcaldy is a reluctance to take a chance and to concentrat­e on the past rather than the future. What we are trying to do is present an opportunit­y.

“This has been 10 years in the making by this area committee but prior to that people were progressin­g plans for the waterfront that I would describe as outrageous and unmanageab­le.

“We have made a plan and cut it into slices that are potentiall­y deliverabl­e.”

Fellow Labour councillor David Ross, the council’s co-leader, said the plans reflected what people had asked for.

“We’re connecting the Esplanade to the High Street much more and having spaces that are useable for enjoyment and leisure,” he said.

“Some of us have been here long enough to remember the plan for piers.

“Now we actually have something that’s achieveabl­e and will be delivered.”

Mr Ross said he had been assured by engineers that traffic flow along the Esplanade would be maintained without additional congestion, despite the loss of a lane in each direction.

“We do need to be prepared for the fact there will probably be a kick back from some people,” he added.

“The consultati­on needs to make sure it’s not just those who are against it who take the opportunit­y to comment.”

The project has been described as a mini version of what Dundee has achieved with its waterfront. The consultati­on will begin at the end of this month, running till just before the school holidays.

It will involve displays in the Mercat and afternoon and evening question and answer sessions in the leisure centre.

 ?? Picture: Kris Miller. ?? Kirkcaldy Esplanade: The new project aims to make the most of arguably the town’s best natural asset.
Picture: Kris Miller. Kirkcaldy Esplanade: The new project aims to make the most of arguably the town’s best natural asset.

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