Calls for safety measures near Clerihan due to speeding
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new arrivals, making art, online teaching. it s the opposite to the journey i took. i grew up here. my grandfather was a borough engineer in its heyday. one of his projects was the town s famous miniature railway. 90 years on, much has changed. the variety theatres have gone, along with some of the old attractions. the pavilion hotel was replaced with this. nevertheless, much of it is unchanged and, as lockdown eases, it s busy. i went to meet the spokeswoman for the local hospitality association and realised we were in the same class at school. so how has business been over the last few weeks? very good. it means we re full, and people are staying for a bit longer. obviously, they re missing the breaks abroad, so instead of two, three nights a week, three and four nights some weeks, so that s very good. it feels much the same
in common beyond the love of an early morning dip. came to scarborough about two and a half years ago. it was literally a whim. my mum now lives in scarborough, moved up from northamptonshire. new arrivals, making art, online teaching. it s the opposite to the journey i took. i grew up here. my grandfather was a borough engineer in its heyday. one of his projects was the town s famous miniature railway. 90 years on, much has changed. the variety theatres have gone, along with some of the old attractions. the pavilion hotel was replaced with this. nevertheless, much of it is unchanged and, as lockdown eases, it s busy. i went to meet the spokeswoman for the local hospitality association and realised we were in the same class at school.
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Inlet to Tunnel, Loch Katrine; Thomas Annan (1829 - 1887); Glasgow, Scotland; negative 1876; print 1877; Albumen silver print. (Photo by: Sepia Times/Universal Images Group via Getty Images) ARE you in the game for large-scale responses to environmental public health disasters? Ones that may take us into the middle of the following century and still be functional and essential? For a start, try the Katrine Aqueduct. Happy, hard-hatted engineers from Scottish Water were glorying this week in their refurbishment and upgrade of this mighty 160-year-old construction, officially opened by Queen Victoria on October 14, 1859. £20 million has been spent on a range of reinforcements and repairs.
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