The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Iconic view from Swilcan Bridge could be altered.

Proposal for four townhouses in the vicinity of Swilcan Bridge

- CHERYL PEEBLES cpeebles@thecourier.co.uk

A backdrop to one of the sporting world’s most iconic locations could be altered by constructi­on of contempora­ry housing.

One of the houses closest to Swilcan Bridge on the Old Course in St Andrews could be demolished to make way for four modern townhouses.

The old stone bridge between the first and 18th fairways of the course is one of the most photograph­ed spots in the sport and the town.

Some of the world’s most famous golfers have been pictured on the shepherds’ crossing, thought to be more than 700 years old, including Old Tom Morris, Tom Watson, Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods.

The owners of Fairways, on the Links, have applied to Fife Council for permission to demolish the 1960s-built house and replace it with a row of luxury homes designed by a firm of awardwinni­ng architects.

If approved, the high-end houses will overlook the spot where Open winners have held aloft the Claret Jug.

The proposal has had a mixed response in the town.

St Andrews Preservati­on Trust said the design of the three and four-storey homes is “inspiratio­nal”, while the town’s community council criticised it as overdevelo­pment.

Community council planning convener Penny Uprichard said: “Hundreds and possibly thousands of people take photograph­s from the Swilcan Bridge during the year, and from the steps to the first tee from the Royal and Ancient Golf Club.

“Many of them will not wish to include the proposed buildings in their photograph­s as they are not typical of St Andrews, nor of the conservati­on area.”

Preservati­on trust planning convener Dorothea Morrison said the four houses would “demonstrat­e how well 21st Century architectu­re can fit into a small historic town”.

Architects Sutherland Hussey Harris were behind the town’s Westburn Lane flats which were named the best building in Scotland by the Royal Incorporat­ion of Architects in Scotland in 2015.

Charles Hussey said a similar approach had been taken to the design for Fairways. He said: “This is a very sensitive site and it calls for something of high aspiration.

“We are all too aware that any contempora­ry architectu­re in a highly sensitive site creates mixed opinion, and I would worry if it didn’t,” he said.

“We are confident that if this is granted planning permission it will be a fantastic addition to the city fabric.”

Applicants Athole Reid & Gillian Aspin, who own the existing two-storey house, intend to keep two of the new houses and sell the others.

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 ??  ?? Above: The design for Fairways by Sutherland Hussey Harris. Above right: Arnold Palmer on the bridge in 1995.
Above: The design for Fairways by Sutherland Hussey Harris. Above right: Arnold Palmer on the bridge in 1995.
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