logo
New owner of unfinished 3,000-home Countesswells development

New owner of unfinished 3,000-home Countesswells development

BBC News01-07-2025
A new owner has taken over a building firm behind an unfinished housing estate on the outskirts of Aberdeen.Countesswells Development Ltd (CDL), which went into administration in November 2021, planned to construct about 3,000 homes as well as schools, retail and leisure facilities.It is thought about 900 homes have been built in Countesswells, a suburb which lies to the west of Aberdeen. Stirling-based Ogilvie Homes Ltd has bought land and some of CDL's assets for an undisclosed sum.
The company said it was looking forward to pushing ahead with the development.
CDL blamed the oil and gas downturn and Covid pandemic for the administration move.But it said it firmly believed in the future of the housing project, which was split between a number of housebuilders.Among them was the Stewart Milne Group, which collapsed last year.
Although building work on housing has stalled in recent years, the new community is now home to a primary school and a health centre, as well as some shops. However, amid the uncertainty over its future, Aberdeen City Council decided last year not to build a proposed secondary school.The local authority opted instead for a replacement academy at Hazlehead instead.It will take pupils from areas including Countesswells.Ogilvie Homes' land director Julie Leece said: "Countesswells is a significant new premium mixed-use development that is already proving to be a major asset to the north east of Scotland. "We look forward to working with current and new home owners, the local community and key stakeholders, developers, investors and suppliers on the next phases of the masterplan."Tom MacLennan, of administrators FRP Advisory, said the firm was "very pleased" to have completed the sale. He added: "We would also like to thank residents, the local community and a wide range of stakeholders for their patience and support throughout."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

JOHN MACLEOD: What this Clydeside giant could teach the political pipsqueaks of today
JOHN MACLEOD: What this Clydeside giant could teach the political pipsqueaks of today

Daily Mail​

time17 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

JOHN MACLEOD: What this Clydeside giant could teach the political pipsqueaks of today

It's a Glasgow shipyard: July 30, 1971. It's muggy, with men everywhere – thousands huddling in around the platform, hanging on Jimmy Reid's every word. Still not 40, assured, fluent, neatly suited and be-tied. Like an achingly cool teacher – and enjoying himself. 'We are not going to strike,' he carols. 'We are not even having a sit-in strike. Nobody and nothing will come in, and nothing will go out, without our permission. 'And there will be no hooliganism, there will be no vandalism, there will be no bevvying' – there is warm laughter – 'because the world is watching us, and it is our responsibility to conduct ourselves with responsibility, with dignity, and maturity.' Jimmy Reid's moment at the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders work-in is still one of Scotland's greatest hits. Up there with Jim Baxter running rings around England's World Cup-winning side. Archie Gemmill's goal in Argentina; Rikki Fulton's Supercop pulling up Taggart himself. The 'work-in' – occasioned because, in 1971, the Heath administration would not advance a £6million loan to keep the yards, with their full order books, ticking through a tight spot – was brilliantly framed. Not your usual strike, occupation or demo. But based on the blazing concept of the right to work, not merely the right not to be made redundant – not just the rights of one riveter, but those of an entire community. In an instant it captured the public's imagination. The likes of Matt McGinn and Billy Connolly rolled into Govan, Scotstoun and Yoker to entertain the lads. Donations poured in from the public. There was even a £5,000 cheque from John Lennon. Trounced in the court of public opinion, Heath blinked first. The government caved – and, thanks to Jimmy Airlie (the strategist) and Jimmy Reid (the rhetorician) two of the yards thrive to this day. Both men were stalwarts of the Communist Party. Indeed, Reid was a Clydebank councillor and, when he stood for Dunbartonshire Central in the February 1974 General Election, many thought he would be our first Communist MP since Willie Gallagher. It was an extraordinary era when, though Labour had many more members in Greater Glasgow, the Communists had far more activists. And – as the men of my late father's blue-collar Free Church congregation often told him (for the most part, wiry Lewismen) Communist shop stewards and officials served them far better than the Labour jobsworths. They listened. They cared. Indeed, they were weirdly Presbyterian. They spoke with the certitude of a preacher; their cadences – and Jimmy Reid, really, was our last great platform orator – echoed the Scottish Metrical Psalms and the King James Bible. Born in Govan in 1932, Reid's formal education ended at 14. He served briefly and unhappily in a stockbroker's office, found his metier as a shipbuilding engineer, joined the League of Labour Youth, and drifted rapidly to the Communist Party even as, bright and curious, he took avidly to lifelong learning. This was a world of dignity and structure that has all but gone. Boys did not just learn a trade; they learned to be men. There was constant discussion and debate, from which sparks flew and leaders emerged. A wider community – some 20,000 supply-chain jobs depended on those shipyards, as well as the 8,000 immediately employed – sat on the shoulders of strong women, family values, corner shops and churchgoing. And a planet away from the graffitied, heroin-addled drear to which much of West-Central Scotland is reduced today. That merry – if dignified – oration was not even Reid's greatest speech. In 1972, he was installed as Rector of Glasgow University. His address would win headlines all over the world and was even printed, verbatim, in the New York Times. 'From the very depth of my being,' Reid declared, 'I challenge the right of any man or any group of men, in business or in government, to tell a fellow human being that he or she is expendable…' His theme was alienation: a warning against blind pursuit of personal success, regardless of the consequences for others. 'Reject these attitudes. Reject the values and false morality that underlie these attitudes. A rat race is for rats. We're not rats. We're human beings. Reject the insidious pressures in society that would blunt your critical faculties to all that is happening around you, that would caution silence in the face of injustice lest you jeopardise your chances of promotion and self-advancement…' It was, someone said, the greatest speech since the Gettysburg Address. Yet only fragments of video and audio survive. This week, Reid's daughter Eileen, 66, has called for it all to be restaged and reinvented digitally, with the aid of artificial intelligence. For all Jimmy's ability, abundant charm and iron-clad integrity, he would never secure a national platform on which to stand. Time and again he lost elections for high union office. He slipped into the Labour Party, and stood against SNP incumbent Gordon Wilson at Dundee East in 1979. But terrified Tories in Broughty Ferry and so on voted tactically for Wilson, dreading anyone straight out of the Communist Party, and Reid was defeated. He would have the ear of Neil Kinnock, but could not win the trust of the wider Scottish Labour movement. He was thought too clever by half; too prone to unpredictable announcements, too thoughtful to be a knee-jerk supporter of every last, fashionable Left-wing cause. In 1984 he slammed the smuggest of union barons for the betrayal of his members: 'Arthur Scargill's leadership of the miners' strike has been a disgrace. The price to be paid for his folly will be immense. 'He will have destroyed the NUM as an effective fighting force within British trade unionism for the next 20 years. If kamikaze pilots were to form their own union, Arthur would be an ideal choice for leader.' It wowed the country – but appalled the comrades. From 1994, disillusioned, Reid moved away from Blair and New Labour. In 2001, he founded the Scottish Left Review; in 2005, he joined the SNP. In August 2010, Reid, 78, was felled by a brain haemorrhage. He was quintessentially a youth of the 1940s. Immaculately groomed, formally dressed and with the poise of Hollywood, Jimmy Reid could have stepped out of a Vettriano painting. Hugh Kerr, sometime Scottish Labour politician, met him for the last time in 2004, when the two addressed a London meeting of United Left MEPs. He recalled: 'At a good lunch afterwards, with his customary brandy and cigar, he said: 'Hugh, you know, there is nothing too good for the working class.' 'For me, he was a deeply human person who loved the good things in life: literature, music and, above all, people.'

Judge orders Craig Burley to pay back £465,000 tax… and even has a dig at his World Cup nightmare
Judge orders Craig Burley to pay back £465,000 tax… and even has a dig at his World Cup nightmare

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Judge orders Craig Burley to pay back £465,000 tax… and even has a dig at his World Cup nightmare

Former Scotland star Craig Burley has lost a legal battle with HMRC over a £465,000 unpaid tax bill. The ex-Celtic and Chelsea midfielder was told by the tax authorities he owed money related to his investments in a film production scheme. During the hearing, the judge reminded Burley about his World Cup nightmare. The Scotland player was sent off as Craig Brown's side were humiliated by Morocco, crashing out of the 1998 tournament in France after a 3-0 defeat. In his decision published last week, Judge Mark Baldwin said: 'Mr Burley used to be a professional footballer. '[His lawyer] Mr Cannon told us that he played for Scotland in the World Cup, although not how well Scotland fared.' The hearing was told he was sent demands totalling £465,967 for the tax years 2010-11, 2011-12, 2014-15, 2015-16, and 2016-17. On the advice of financial advisers, Burley had transferred his interests in two film schemes into a limited liability partnership (LLP) of which he was a member. The 53-year-old, who now works as a pundit for US broadcaster ESPN, claimed the move meant he either owed no tax or the lower rate of tax on any profits from the schemes. However, HMRC disagreed and told the former midfielder he would have to pay the full amount. Burley challenged the tax closure notices issued to him at the First-Tier Tax Tribunal in London. Following a hearing, Judge Baldwin has now found in HMRC's favour and said Burley was still personally liable for tax from the film profits. Burley told the tribunal that around 2001 he was persuaded to invest in two film schemes, which were presented as having the effect of reducing his personal tax liability by making use of government incentives to invest in the film industry. He could not recall it being made clear to him that, if the films were successful, he would be obliged to pay tax on the proceeds, even though those proceeds were not paid to him but were instead applied in reducing associated bank loans. He was therefore faced with unexpected tax liabilities when the films returned profits. He said he and his accountant met with a tax adviser who suggested the interest he had in the film partnerships could be introduced to the LLP and those profits could be attributed to his limited company which would then bear tax at a lower rate. HMRC's legal team said it was 'unrealistic to analyse income within the partnerships as being used to discharge Mr Burley's personal liabilities without there being any form of income credit to him'. In his ruling, Judge Baldwin said: 'The security arrangements over the film leasing transactions had been entered into by the partnerships as a collective, and they continued wholly unaffected by the additional, personal arrangements between Mr Burley and the LLP. 'Mr Burley's share, through the partnerships, of the film leasing income continued to be applied by the partnerships in the same way as it had been before [and] was paid directly to Mr Burley's lenders and used by them to discharge his obligations to them. 'If the use of income in that way meant Mr Burley was entitled to the profits of the partnerships before he executed the assignment in favour of the LLP, it is hard to see why the same analysis did not obtain afterwards, since nothing changed so far as the receipt, use and application of those amounts were concerned. 'Mr Burley was entitled to the income because the income was being applied for his benefit... it is his income on which he is fully chargeable to income tax.' Burley, who is now based in the United States, was capped 46 times for Scotland.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store