Plans for 145-plot allotment in Inverness approved

An architects' visualisation of the allotments. It show people, represented as white silhouettes, working at rows of leafy, green vegetables. There are also the faint shaoes of greenhouses. Trees line and hedges line the allotment area.Image source, Knocknagael Ltd
Image caption,

The plans were submitted to Highland Council in May

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A charity has secured planning permission for a 145-plot allotment area in Inverness.

Knocknagael Ltd is also in the final stages of taking over about 20 acres (8 ha) of land on a Scottish government-owned bull stud on the south side of the city.

Bulls kept on the 326-acre (132 ha) farm at Knocknagael are hired out to crofters across the Highlands and Western Isles.

As well as the allotments, a car park with a height barrier and cycle and disabled parking spaces are to be built.

The charity, which has secured support from the Scottish Land Fund for its purchase, submitted a planning application to Highland Council at the end of May.

The bull stud scheme at Knocknagael dates back to Victorian times.

Plans for the community bid for an area of land called the Smiddy Field were first made in 2015 after it was deemed at the time to be surplus to requirements.

There were local concerns the land would be developed for housing and lost as a community asset.

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