The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Plans to transform Kinfauns Church approved.

kinfauns: Officials refuse plan for two parking spaces outside church

- KIRSTY MCINTOSH kmicintosh@thecourier.co.uk

A 20-year battle to breathe new life into an abandoned Perthshire church has taken another step forward after the latest plans were given the green light.

A fresh applicatio­n to transform C-listed Kinfauns Church into a luxury home was submitted to Perth and Kinross Council in July.

The detailed plans reveal a fourbedroo­med house featuring a jacuzzi and sauna in the two-level master bedroom and transforma­tion of the bell tower into a viewing platform.

Initial planning permission was secured last year, despite opposition from people with connection­s to the building and graveyard.

The new plans were approved by Perth and Kinross Council last week but officials refused a plan for two parking spaces outside the church.

The move comes after members of the public expressed concern about access to the church’s graveyard, the local war memorial and the ability to turn their own cars on the narrow road.

A report to the council stated: “The applicant proposes two parking spaces at the eastern end of Church Road, which is unadopted for maintenanc­e purposes.

“The road is nonetheles­s a public right of way over which all users have a right of access.

“In this case access is required to the

I think the whole thing is so ghastly when you imagine how many people are buried there. LADY TANYA LOWSON

war memorial and turning area, so the proposed parking spaces are not acceptable.

“For this reason, the submitted site plan is not approved, and permission is not granted for parking spaces on any part of the public road to be used exclusivel­y as part of the proposed developmen­t.”

The plans have been controvers­ial since first mooted 20 years ago, with campaigner­s fighting to preserve the building. They argued that turning it into a private house would lead to the “desecratio­n” of a nearby cemetery.

Proposals were rejected four times on the grounds it would be incompatib­le with the graveyard.

The most recent attempt, lodged in 2011, drew scores of objections from local residents.

However, it was approved following an appeal to the Scottish Government.

Campaigner Lady Tanya Lowson welcomed the concession on parking but expressed her disappoint­ment that the plans had been approved.

She said: “I think the whole thing is so ghastly when you imagine how many people are buried there.

“It went to the Scottish Secretary three times and, once we’d lost, there could be no objections. But when they lost they were able to continue harassing the issue. That doesn’t say much for the law.

“My husband’s grandfathe­r built the bell tower and put in a window to commemorat­e his son, who died in the First World War. We’ve never even been offered the window back so we can put it in another church.

“The whole church was donated by local families. The plans look lovely, but it’s our church and we would have gone on fighting.”

The property was sold by the Church of Scotland in 1991, but has lain empty ever since.

 ?? Picture: Steve MacDougall. ?? The C-listed Kinfauns Church has been at the heart of a planning battle.
Picture: Steve MacDougall. The C-listed Kinfauns Church has been at the heart of a planning battle.

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