Falkirk_Braes

Falkirk Braes

Falkirk Braes

Geographical entity in Falkirk, Scotland


The Falkirk Braes is a geographical and sociopolitical entity within the Falkirk local authority area in Scotland. The population (both suburban and rural) is approximately 32,000 (2018), about 20% of the total for Falkirk council area.[1][2]

Description

Newlands Road, Brightons
Westquarter Primary School
Shops on Polmont Main Street
New houses at the Union Canal at Reddingmuirhead, built on former industrial land
'Tam Bain' public house, Laurieston

Covering an area of high ground within 5 miles (8.0 km) to the south and east of the county town Falkirk and south of Grangemouth, its core comprises a number of small villages including mining and quarrying communities,[3][4][5] which have each expanded to form a near-contiguous acentric suburban environment.[6] Historically within Stirlingshire, most of the Braes villages fell under Grangemouth parish,[7] while Laurieston was part of Falkirk parish[8] and the south-east including Maddiston was in Muiravonside parish.[9] The largest village, with the majority of amenities such as health centre and library, is Polmont, but this is not at the geographical centre of the agglomeration and is itself spread over a wide territory, having grown in several places in different eras.[5][6] The centre could be argued to be west of Polmont at the site of the Meadowbank Colliery and Brickworks,[10][11] nominally in Redding; due to its industrial history, it is one of the undeveloped parcels of land in the area.

In the 21st century, speculative housebuilding (including on brownfield sites such as the Nobel explosives works),[12][13][14][15] has continued to fill most of the gaps between the settlements, owing to the location falling roughly midway between Glasgow and Edinburgh with links to both cities via the railway network (at Polmont, which falls on the boundary with Brightons) and motorways (M9) as well as employment locally at Falkirk and Grangemouth, which has been highlighted in marketing by developers.[15][16][17][18][19][20][21]

Westquarter Burn
Maddiston

The area returns six representatives to Falkirk Council, three each representing the Lower Braes[22][23] and Upper Braes[24][25] wards, divided by the Union Canal which runs east–west through the territory; both wards (particularly Upper Braes) also include outlying rural villages such as Shieldhill, Slamannan and Whitecross in addition to the cluster of villages closer to Falkirk. In wider political contexts, as of 2019 the Braes falls wholly within the Falkirk East constituency at Holyrood,[26] but at Westminster is divided between Linlithgow and East Falkirk[27] and Falkirk.[28]

Braes High School

The local secondary school, with approximately 1,000 pupils and six feeder primaries across the Upper Braes, is Braes High School, located in Reddingmuirhead[29][30] (adjacent to HMYOI Polmont). However, in the Lower Braes the eponymous primary schools in Laurieston, Westquarter and Whitecross, plus St Margaret's Primary in Polmont, are affiliated to Graeme High School in east Falkirk.[31]

Muiravonside Country Park between Maddiston and Whitecross (featuring the Avon Aqueduct) is also within the area.[32] The River Avon flows through the park - it denotes the eastern and southern boundaries of the Braes territory.

List of localities

Displaying 2011 census figures.[33]

Villages in conurbation

Total 22,197

Isolated villages on periphery

See also


References

  1. Polmont and Brightons, Falkirk Local History Society
  2. Stirling 1, Scottish Mining Website
  3. Nobels Factory in Redding was an explosive place Archived 2019-12-12 at the Wayback Machine, Falkirk Herald, 17 April 2012
  4. Residents plead with builders to finish work Archived 2020-01-04 at the Wayback Machine, Falkirk Herald, 2 April 2009
  5. New showhomes to view in Scotland, The Herald, 2 April 2016
  6. [Callendar Rise Phase 8 Web Brochure], Taylor Wimpey
  7. Home Archived 2020-01-04 at the Wayback Machine, Braes High School
  8. Muiravonside Country Park, Falkirk Community Trust
  9. "Insight 2011 Census, No. 6 - Settlement Population and Household Estimates" (PDF). Falkirk Council. Retrieved 4 January 2020.

55.986218°N 3.727595°W / 55.986218; -3.727595


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