Scheduled Maintenance
Please be advised that this website will undergo scheduled maintenance on the following dates: •
Tuesday 3rd December 11:00-15:00
During these times, some services may be temporarily unavailable. We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.
UKAEA housing, 13-15 Howburn Road. View from west
DP 258472
Description UKAEA housing, 13-15 Howburn Road. View from west
Date 28/3/2017
Collection Historic Environment Scotland
Catalogue Number DP 258472
Category On-line Digital Images
Scope and Content For the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, housing was allocated according to grade. This three-bedroomed ‘B-type’ house with garage would have originally been occupied by a Dounreay employee at ‘Engineer 1’ (or equivalent) level, with it believed that such staff required accommodation of high standard. It was completed in 1958 as part of the second phase of housing development. With the exception of the timber housing built quickly at the beginning of the housing programme, this house shows the type of construction which the UKAEA settled on for the majority of its scheme. These semi-traditional houses, which incorporated a prefabricated timber frame, brickwork and exterior harling, were built by Alexander Hall & Son of Aberdeen. They consisted of A, B and C types, with A being the largest for higher grade staff. If a staff member was promoted or their family increased, they became eligible for a larger house. As an aside to nuclear development, the built environment of nuclear townships in Britain is overlooked in favour of its technical and scientific elements. Yet the consequences of the atomic programme extend beyond the technological: the social infrastructure behind the science was integral to the success of many nuclear ventures. This had its most significant impact following the 1954 decision to site the country’s first fast breeder reactor establishment at Dounreay in Caithness, the most northerly county of the British mainland. The arrival of the UKAEA brought nuclear science to a rural landscape with an agricultural skills base. The chosen site was located close to the town of Thurso, the population of which grew from 3000 to 9000 as a result of the UKAEA ‘importing’ skilled scientists and engineers into the county to work alongside local workers to ensure the safe running of the establishment. To accommodate this influx the town underwent an extensive period of planning, with 1007 houses built to house the new citizens who were termed ‘the atomics’. By the end of the building programme in May 1963, four recognised estates of UKAEA houses had been built in Thurso: Castlegreen, Ormlie, Pennyland and Mount Vernon, with a small number of houses built at Scrabster and Castletown. Accommodating this population stands as an example of quick, complex change, triggered by a technical experiment with enduring social consequences. The housing developments were managed by the Thurso architectural firm of Sinclair Macdonald & Son, whose archives are held by Historic Environment Scotland. The UKAEA built houses are now owned privately or by Pentland Housing Association.
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/collection/1576184
File Format (TIF) Tagged Image File Format bitmap
Attribution: © Historic Environment Scotland
Licence Type: Full
You may: copy, display, store and make derivative works [eg documents] solely for licensed personal use at home or solely for licensed educational institution use by staff and students on a secure intranet.
Under these conditions: Display Attribution, No Commercial Use or Sale, No Public Distribution [eg by hand, email, web]