The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Not-so-fond farewell to notorious Perth housing developmen­t

- PERTH OFFICE REPORTER TWITTER: @C JBUCHAN Get in touch with your local office at Perth or send a letter to The Courier at letters@thecourier.co.uk

Gentrifica­tion. It’s one of those buzz words capable of triggering extreme responses from certain quarters.

It can conjure images of age-old tenement blocks modernised into hipster cafés, serving up Coco Pops and lemonade at £19 a bowl.

On one hand it’s a necessary part of urban planning, regenerati­ng rundown areas that are bursting with potential and increasing the neighbourh­ood’s economic value.

On the other hand, its the cruel displaceme­nt of low-income families, pricing them out of their own homes by modernisin­g their streets to meet middle-class standards.

Now Perth is getting ready to try its hand at a classic bit of gentrifica­tion.

As part of the council’s nationally recognised “Home First” programme, St Catherine’s Square will transform from a block of mostly emergency bedsits into a series of modern, attractive flats or maisonette­s for the mainstream market.

Home First – the authority’s rapid rehousing transition plan – moves away from using temporary accommodat­ion, and instead assists individual­s and families directly into more permanent places.

And it’s working, too, with new stats revealing the number of residents living in temporary homes had fallen by 24% locally – the biggest drop of its kind in Scotland.

It’s unlikely the St Catherine’s Square redevelopm­ent will be as controvers­ial as similar projects in other parts of the country. There’s not much love for the housing block, which has become synonymous with anti-social behaviour, drugs and crime.

But it will cause – at the very least – some upheaval for a number of residents and their families.

The work is timely too, with a planned £30 million shopping complex earmarked for the car park site just across the street.

It will make the area more attractive to potential big-name tenants who, I’d imagine, wouldn’t be too keen to open their new shiny stores next door to the city’s most notorious housing scheme.

Gentrifica­tion is rarely straight forward, and we have to trust that it will be carried out sensitivel­y with the interests of those affected made paramount.

Perth is getting ready to try its hand at a classic bit of gentrifica­tion

 ??  ?? St Catherine’s Square which is to be transforme­d in a bold gentrifica­tion move.
St Catherine’s Square which is to be transforme­d in a bold gentrifica­tion move.
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