logo
Glasgow engineering firm lands deal with Transport for London creating 40 jobs

Glasgow engineering firm lands deal with Transport for London creating 40 jobs

The National4 days ago

Gibson's Engineering has agreed to the new contract, which will see them stripping back and overhauling 23 long vehicle wagons at its new engineering facility at the St Rollox rail depot in Springburn.
St Rollox, often referred to locally as The Caley, reopened as a manufacturing, maintenance and repair rail depot last year with more than £10 million already invested into the site.
Fraser Gibson, managing director of Gibson's Engineering, welcomed the two-year deal, which will help create 40 new jobs in the local area.
READ MORE: Nine million to receive winter fuel payment as Rachel Reeves confirms U-turn
He said: 'This is fantastic news for Gibson's, as well as for the wider Scottish rail industry.
'Since reopening St Rollox, Dougie and I have worked to restore its position as a centre for engineering excellence.
'This contract shows that we are well on our way to seeing The Caley thrive again, with a rapidly expanding workforce and significant new projects.'
Following the closure of the depot in 2019 by an investment fund, businessman David Moulsdale purchased the facility in 2021.
Moulsdale said he had a vision for the revitalisation of the landmark as a train engineering depot.
(Image: Gibson's Engineerin)
Since then, more than £10m has already been invested by Moulsdale, including the purchase price of the facility, refurbishment and ongoing maintenance of the buildings.
Moulsdale said: 'I was always confident in our ambition to see significant employment of engineers, coachbuilders, project managers and apprentices at St Rollox, and this new agreement with TfL shows that we are breathing new life into 'The Caley', Glasgow and the Scottish economy.'
Tom Cunnington, head of Logistics and Manufacturing at TfL, also welcomed the deal as he said: 'We're pleased that this new contract with Gibsons Engineering will utilise the St Rollox rail depot and help create new jobs for those living near Glasgow.
'Our extensive supply chain supports growth and opportunities right across the UK, with around two thirds of our suppliers based outside London, and nearly a third of our overall spend and resulting economic benefit therefore felt outside of London.
'By renewing vital transport infrastructure through sustained investment, we can drive economic growth, within London as well as across the UK.'
(Image: Gibson's Engineerin)
Meanwhile, the Labour MSP Paul Sweeney added: 'A century ago, Springburn was the world's largest centre of locomotive production, with exports from its various railway works going to all parts of the world.
'I have campaigned relentlessly and have supported the effort of the new owners to restore railway engineering work to The Caley, so it is exciting to see Gibson's Engineering revive this legendary locomotive works with this latest contract milestone.
'I know the difference it is going to make to Springburn by providing skilled jobs for our young people and reviving local pride in skilled manufacturing work.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Readers Letters: Believe carbon capture project support when we see it
Readers Letters: Believe carbon capture project support when we see it

Scotsman

time36 minutes ago

  • Scotsman

Readers Letters: Believe carbon capture project support when we see it

Chancellor Rachel Reeves says financial backing for the Acorn carbon capture and storage project is coming… but when, asks reader Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... More smoke and mirrors from the Labour Party and the UK Government. From my recollection this is the third time the UK Government has proclaimed financial backing for the Acorn carbon capture and storage project (proposed 20 years ago) but there is still no money on the table. While tens of billions of pounds continue to flow into projects south of the Border, Scotland is supposed to be grateful for the UK Government now declaring financial support for the Edinburgh exascale supercomputer a year after it cancelled funding. Increased public spending commitments have been cynically hailed by Labour Party politicians without reference to projected inflation increases or different spending choices made north and south of the Border. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad To cap it all, Scottish Secretary Ian Murray now hypocritically says that the Scottish Government did not spend last year's Budget increase 'wisely' when much of it was spent on increased public sector wages, while the Scottish Government also continued to mitigate the effects of Westminster-imposed austerity. Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves leaves from 11 Downing Street on Wednesday before heading to Parliament to present her Spending Review (Picture: Henry Nicholls/AFP) Or has the 'Governor' now abandoned the last vestiges of socialist principles he presumably once held and if that is the case why are Scottish trade unions still supporting a Labour Party that in government continues to betray the poor and disadvantaged in Scotland while being complicit in the continuing slaughter and devastation in Gaza? Stan Grodynski, Longniddry, East Lothian Power play It's good that Edinburgh is to be blessed with the UK's most powerful supercomputer, but what about the considerable electricity required to support it? Is there now to be a new power station built? For surely our creaking National Grid system will either need to be upgraded or a dedicated and separately managed power station will have to be built to service it. Elizabeth Marshall, Edinburgh Privacy paramount Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Jane Lax (Letters, 12 June) says the police are recording people's sex wrongly. She writes, 'The law is the law', but her description of the law on this is incorrect. The Supreme Court was clear that its recent judgment on the meaning of trans people's sex applies only to the Equality Act. For other law, it remains the case that a gender recognition certificate changes a trans person's legal sex 'for all purposes' (to directly quote the legislation). The Court also said that discrimination against trans people continues to be unlawful under the Equality Act. For the police to ask victims, witnesses or suspects whether they are trans, as a matter of course, would very likely be unlawful indirect discrimination, undermining trans people's right to privacy. The law allows an exception on a case-by-case basis: when asking is necessary and for a legitimate reason. There will be good reason to record that a suspect or victim of crime is trans in some cases where it is relevant to the nature of the crime, or where an accused person is remanded in custody. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad But for the large majority of offences with non-custodial outcomes – theft, vandalism, speeding, and many more – whether anyone involved as victim, witness or suspect is trans will be completely irrelevant to the offence, and should not be asked or recorded. Tim Hopkins, Edinburgh Driving forces Harald Tobermann (Letters, 12 June) wants even 'more buses to ensure balance and harmony on our roads'. Actually we need fewer buses driving around with few passengers in them. Far too much taxpayers' money is spent on public transport and far too little on maintaining and improving public roads. The chaotic Edinburgh tram project cost £1 billion for eight miles and because it was years late and grossly over budget there was a public inquiry into its failings, which cost £13m. Meanwhile, Edinburgh has been turned into an anti-car city with bottlenecks caused by bus lanes, lack of parking, congestion, potholes, and more patches than Windows Vista. While Newcastle has a three-lane city bypass Edinburgh has a two-lane one which is often at a standstill. Sheriffhall roundabout was supposed to be replaced by a flyover with construction beginning this year. What happened to that? The fact is that road users – commercial and private – are being robbed by central government and mostly ignored by local government in favour of subsidised buses and mass travel. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Take, for example, road fund licence, or vehicle tax as the DVLA now styles it. This is £195 for 12 months for a car with a list price under £40,000, but £620 for the first five years if it is over £40,000. A £40,000 car will trouser the government £8,000 in vat. All this largesse doesn't go back into the road system, it goes straight into Rachel Reeves's piggy bank. A new road construction programme would boost economic development, as would reducing taxes on owning and driving cars, vans and lorries. William Loneskie, Oxton, Lauder, Berwickshire Sick society? Who will win a Scotsman Health Hero award ? Despite the nice picture of him on the front of The Scotsman of 11 June, is SNP health minister Neil Gray really in the running? Our NHS is floundering in a sea of crises, the latest being the recent sharp rise in drug deaths. This is even more awful given the SNP's 'clean' drug usage programme at the Thistle in Glasgow which was meant to really help. It is rumoured that John Swinney is considering a cabinet reshuffle. If Mr Gray goes, who can possibly replace him? This is not because Mr Gray is irreplaceable, more to do with the question as to whether anyone in the SNP is able to do the job following a long line of failures, including Nicola Sturgeon and Humza Yousaf. Mr Gray ought to have been a certainty for a hero award. The likelihood he is highly unlikely to get one speaks volumes. Gerald Edwards, Glasgow Fly high Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Lt Cdr Lester May raises an interesting opinion (Letters, 10 June), but I regret to inform him that he is almost a whole century out of date (and more so in the UK context). Military aviation has become acknowledged worldwide as the primary armed force, without which a modern-day army and navy simply could not function. Postulating that a ship-borne or army-ancilliary alternative to an Air Force could ever work is, frankly, farcical. I could refer him to the many studies from the early 1930s onwards, but I think that the current UK perception as encompassed by the Chiefs of Staff Commitee is sufficient to vindicate a tri-service policy. Iain Masterton, Kirknewton, West Lothian Lines of sadness Former Makar Kathleen Jamie this week, commenting on the unveiling of her words on the Canongate wall at Holyrood, said: 'Poetry is democratic. It's available to anybody – through libraries, through memory.' How right she is. I was reminded of a beautiful poem of hers, 'Lochan', which ends with this line: 'underneath a rowan, a white boat waits'. This poem captures my sadness at the growing evidence of a crisis in democracy in Scotland. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Yes, a white boat waits for us all: possibly beside a flamingo or near a needless wind turbine. Let's hope there are some rowans left when our time comes. Mary Howley, Dunoon, Argyll Ferry tale It is somewhat ironic that EU rules put the final voyage of the Hebridean Isles ferry on hold, given the EU funded its construction (your report, 11 June). A grant from the European Regional Development Fund enabled financing of the project and a senior Director-General from the European Commission attended its launch by the Duchess of Kent at Selby on 4 July 1985. Stephen Fox, Edinburgh Lights out In all my years of attending art galleries and museums, I have never encountered such crass irresponsibility as that of Glasgow's Gallery of Modern Art, which clearly think nothing of putting visitors' safety at the height of the tourist season in jeopardy. The ground floor main gallery 'film installation' exhibition for John Akomfrah's Mimesis: African Soldier is in pitch blackness – apart from the small video screens – and near to its only entrance, hidden in perfect darkness, are two large concrete pillars, impossible to see until one literally walks painfully into them, and particularly hazardous to those coming in from the street whose eyes have had no chance to adjust so as to have the remotest chance of spotting the pillars in time. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad When I pointed this out to a staff member, their response was to shrug their shoulders and laugh. There's a twisted irony that this touchy feely, sensitivity training obsessed art gallery eschews basic common sense, never mind basic health and safety training that would never have allowed this dangerous state of affairs to have arisen, unless Glasgow Life (the city council's deniable asset Culture and Sport wing) are determined to bankrupt themselves in a litany of injury claims. Mark Boyle, Johnstone, Renfrewshire Mystery moon On Tuesday night I looked out to the south from my bedroom window and saw the moon, very full and riding high over the Pentlands, but to my amazement, it was bright red! Can anybody tell me, is this a natural phenomenon or is it a celestial forecast of impending doom? Enlightenment please. Sandy Macpherson, Edinburgh Write to The Scotsman

'We can't get more people into St Andrews to play golf'
'We can't get more people into St Andrews to play golf'

The Herald Scotland

timean hour ago

  • The Herald Scotland

'We can't get more people into St Andrews to play golf'

New research released earlier this week has estimated that visiting golfers to St Andrews generate £317 million annually for the Scottish economy. Links Trust chief executive Neil Coulson explains why that figure is significant and what the charity, armed with this information, now hopes to achieve. Do you believe this economic impact report was overdue? I would say would accept that St Andrews is very busy in the summer with visitors, but what is the value of that? That's what initiated this report. We want to understand what the value is so we can then understand how we could grow it, potentially - the economic and social benefit. We can't do that alone. We can't get more people into St Andrews to play more golf. We're already busy and we have the local balance that we have to make sure we maintain. So what next? There's got to be some joined-up conversations about infrastructure and how people move around, and also about the experience that people get. There's lots of different sport and tourism sectors doing really good things, but it's about how do you join those up so that a distillery piece is connected to a golf piece that's connected to a heritage piece. How do you connect all those up? At the moment they are isolated, they do really good things on their own, but I think that the power of joining those up has got to be huge. Neil Coulson (Image: Gavin Craigie) You've said that the Links Trust needs to "be bigger than a golf course in St Andrews that manages visitors" - what does that mean? There's opportunity to grow more, for sure. Because we are a charity we don't have shareholders and investors, so the money we generate could be re-invested, whether it's our facilities or projects and initiatives, community projects. In terms of how aspirational you want to be, it's trying to find that right initiatives that really benefit, not just doing whimsical things, but I do think the opportunity is really significant for us to be a good driver for local communities and [nationally]. How does that work when you have a finite amount of capacity? We could say yes, we will double the number of visitors, but frankly we can only accommodate so many people. We need to maintain a balance between local and international golf on our sites. That's very important. The golf courses finish in town and start in town, so we can't just flood it with visitors and ignore that local dynamic. It's not a case of introducing more visitors. In our space it's understanding what the value of the visitors is that we have now, and then it's looking at how can we spread the benefit. It's not a case of us trying to get more. We can't grow the economic and social benefit by just getting more people into St Andrews, but we can do it by trying to collaborate and pushing some of that around Scotland. We could be a catalyst for people coming - that would be a good thing - but then help make it easy for them to get around and try and benefit other places. The Old Course is an icon for golfers around the world (Image: Mark Alexander) The Links Trust announced in January that it is in talks to take over the nearby Duke's golf course, which would help alleviate some of the pressure from the demand for tee times. How's that going? Still in discussions, still finalising, but it's looking promising so we are hopeful of getting that over the line pretty quickly. That will be our eighth golf course. Once we get that on board its opens up some new opportunities again to do something a little bit different. Do you expect that agreement to be finalised before the end of this year? I hope so. There have been some elements of cynicism about the Drive initiative to widen access to Links Trust courses by offering discounted rates - what's your response to that? From my point of view I want to open up access to the golf courses. They're a public asset, people should be able to come and play, but we do have constraints - demand is very high. If we generate a surplus, which we do now, it opens up options on the golf courses as to how you manage them. Drive is a benefit of that. Next year we are going to do it again, and we're going to try and grow it next year and for years to come. Access the entire series of Around the Greens here.

Badenoch to call for end to windfall tax and ban on new oil licences
Badenoch to call for end to windfall tax and ban on new oil licences

STV News

timean hour ago

  • STV News

Badenoch to call for end to windfall tax and ban on new oil licences

Kemi Badenoch is expected to promote the oil and gas sector and call for an end to the UK windfall tax and the ban on new oil licences at the Scottish Conservative conference in Edinburgh on Friday. Badenoch will address her first Scottish party conference as leader at Murrayfield Stadium, followed by her Scottish counterpart Russell Findlay on Saturday. Her speech will accuse the UK Government of 'killing' the oil and gas sector, claiming 'renewing our party and our country means standing up for our oil and gas industry'. The energy profits levy was put in place under the previous Conservative government but extended when Labour entered power. Designed to fund interventions to bring down household bills, the policy has been criticised by those in the industry. If the measure remains in place to 2030 as intended, Badenoch is expected to say 'there will be no industry left to tax'. Scottish Tory leader Russell Findlay will then deliver his inaugural address as leader at the second day of the conference on Saturday. Findlay's speech will come just days after he accused SNP ministers at Holyrood of 'costing Scotland £1bn a year in lost growth and countless billions through their sheer incompetence'. Scottish Conservative website Scottish Tory leader Russell Findlay will deliver his inaugural address as leader at the annual Scottish Tory conference on Saturday. The conference, which the Scottish Tories say will feature a 'packed agenda of fringe events, receptions and debates', follows a series of recent blows to the party's confidence. On Thursday morning, yet another Scottish Tory councillor defected to Reform UK. Aberdeenshire councillor Lauren Knight was the 15th to join Nigel Farage's party in Scotland, and she's the 14th to defect from the Conservative party. The loss came just over a week after the Scottish Tories came within inches of losing their deposit at the Hamilton, Larkhall, and Stonehouse by-election where Reform UK beat their candidate by nearly 5,500 votes. The Tory candidate in Hamilton scored just 5.98% of the vote last week and was 263 votes away from losing his deposit. The conference comes amid major Reform UK gains in England. In early May, Farage's party took over a Labour stronghold in England and made other political gains. The party took control of ten local English councils, won two mayoral races and added a fifth MP to its ranks in the Runcorn and Helsby by-election. Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store