Restoration works approved as part of Inverness Castle transformation
Highland Council has granted approval for a planning application that will see the transformation of Inverness Castle, former site of the city’s courthouse, into a tourism gateway for the region.
The application covered the works necessary to restore the Category A Listed building and convert it for use as a new visitor attraction.
In approving the application, the council’s south planning applications committee noted that the quality of the proposed design is considered to be very high, with a standard of architecture that should complement and enhance the listed building, while still remaining visually subservient to it.
The committee also noted the flexibility of the new uses for the building should ensure a long-term sustainable future for the building, the redevelopment of which is seen as a key project of the council’s strategy for development in the city centre.
Submitted by project architects LDN Architects, the application is in preparation for the main building works contract which will be subject to a tender process beginning in the next few weeks.
Given potential impacts arising from Brexit and the Covid-19 pandemic, the programme of works for the main tender will not be finalised until completion of the tender process. The proposed works currently include the careful conservation of the building fabric, accessibility and environmental upgrades and contemporary new additions. In addition, the proposed works include a new café space and external viewing terraces that, combined, will transform Inverness Castle into a cultural centrepiece to be enjoyed by the public.