The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Eagerly anticipate­d community campus given planning nod

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Highland councillor­s have spoken of their delight after granting planning permission for the long-awaited Tain community campus.

The 3-18 campus is expected to be the greenest in Highland, with high energy efficiency and extensive landscaped grounds.

The council’s north planning committee approved the developmen­t unanimousl­y yesterday afternoon.

Local members said it was a “long and arduous task” to get the school to this point.

They thanked the planners and architects for working with the community to develop a “cutting-edge design”.

The Tain 3-18 campus will include a nursery, primary school, high school, playground­s and sports facilities.

It will sit on a sloping site on Craighill Terrace next to the existing health centre and care home, with views across the Dornoch Firth.

The two-storey building will be the first Highland Council build to meet Passivhaus standards – a building so energyeffi­cient it uses barely any heating.

The stand-out feature of the campus is the landscape gardens and outdoor play space.

Plans for the grounds include orchards, willow dens, growing gardens, timber trails and outdoor theatres.

It will not be without its challenges.

Tain councillor­s Alasdair Rhind and Derek Louden both warned that traffic management will be an issue in the narrow streets surroundin­g the campus.

However, they pledged to work with developers to minimise the impact on residents.

Mr Rhind also said the landscaped gardens would require ongoing maintenanc­e, and urged the council not to let that become an unmanageab­le burden.

For the Tain community, the elephant in the room is the lack of a swimming pool.

Members of the public this week took to Facebook to express their disappoint­ment that a new pool is not included in the design.

Mr Louden alluded to this, but sought to focus on what has been achieved.

“The thing that everybody will take from today is the positives,” he said.

“There are still issues in regard to what isn’t there, but that’s not for today.

“Today, my thoughts are with the teachers and the pupils, who are going to have a much better environmen­t to study and learn in.”

 ?? ?? The landscape gardens are among the stand-outs.
The landscape gardens are among the stand-outs.
 ?? ?? An artist’s impression of the complex.
An artist’s impression of the complex.

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