The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Lochside fight continues after decision is upheld

Building mogul Mr Guild calls on council to open formal consultati­on

- GRAHAM BROWN gbrown@thecourier.co.uk

Another battle of Lochside is looming after a decision at Scotland’s highest civil court cleared the way for the demolition of Forfar’s former leisure centre.

In a 30-page legal judgment following a judicial review challenge launched by two town businessme­n at the Court of Session in Edinburgh last summer, Lady Carmichael upheld Angus Council’s handling of the decision to bulldoze the 45-year-old building.

Lochside leisure centre closed in February 2017 when the new Forfar community campus was opened.

Housebuild­er Mark Guild and town hotelier Donald Stewart mounted the legal fight after branding the demolition decision taken by councillor­s in early 2019 as unlawful.

Angus Council chief executive Margo Williamson said Lady Carmichael’s ruling confirmed the council acted “appropriat­ely and with integrity”.

Mr Guild is now considerin­g an appeal against the outcome having previously challenged the council’s view that the centre is sinking, producing engineerin­g reports suggesting it has 30 years of life left in it.

Mr Stewart, owner of Forfar’s Royal Hotel, had a £30,000 offer for the building rejected after he hoped to convert it into a café and cinema.

The council chief executive has said the authority will now move to the next stage of the demolition plan.

“We have only had a short time to review her judgment in full but it is clear that we have been successful and that Lady Carmichael has found that the council acted appropriat­ely and with integrity,” Mrs Williamson said.

“Consequent­ly the decision taken by Council to demolish Lochside Leisure Centre remains.”

Mr Guild has vowed to fight on, and has an ally in Forfar administra­tion councillor Braden Davy who said it would be a “disgrace” if the six-figure demolition goes ahead.

The businessma­n said: “This decision does not mean the demolition of Lochside leisure centre is the right thing to do, particular­ly where the people of Forfar would wish to be consulted.

“I would call upon the council, even at this late stage, to take a different course by listening to the public and instigatin­g a formal consultati­on on the future of Lochside.”

Conservati­ve councillor Mr Davy said: “This does not change my views. The people of Forfar do not want this demolished, at a cost of hundreds of thousands of pounds of taxpayers’ money, just to create the most expensive piece of grass in Angus.

“It would be a disgrace for this to be demolished without trying.”

Lady Carmichael’s judgment said demolition of the centre would continue to see the common good land used for recreation­al purposes.

The judge said the author of the council engineerin­g report had been “entitled to characteri­se the available informatio­n as indicating that persistent problems were foreseeabl­e, and as continuing in the future to a point that the building was no longer serviceabl­e”.

 ?? Picture: Paul Reid. ?? The future of the Lochside Leisure Centre remains uncertain.
Picture: Paul Reid. The future of the Lochside Leisure Centre remains uncertain.

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