🪟 Glazier in Friockheim, Angus
This one’s up for grabs.
For Glaziers
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- Only one Glazier spot in Friockheim
- Your business, top of the pile — no ads, no rivals, no noise
- £40/month — cancel anytime
Need a glazier?
Nobody’s stepped up in Friockheim yet.
Drop your email — we’ll shout when someone local takes it.
About Glaziers
A glazier fits, replaces, and repairs glass in windows, doors, conservatories, and shopfronts - from emergency boarding and broken double-glazed units to bespoke glass installations.
Misted double-glazed units are a common problem in Scotland's climate and usually mean the seal has failed - a glazier can replace just the glass unit without replacing the whole frame.
For any work involving safety glass - shower screens, doors, low-level panels - make sure the glass used is toughened or laminated to the relevant British Standard.
About Friockheim
Friockheim is a small village in south Angus, roughly halfway between Forfar and Arbroath, with an unusually Germanic-sounding name that reflects its origins as a planned linen-weaving settlement established in the early 19th century.
The village has a school, a church, and a handful of local businesses, and sits in the flat agricultural landscape typical of this part of Angus.
It is a quiet, self-contained community with easy road access to Arbroath and Forfar for wider services.
About Angus
Angus is a council area on the east coast of Scotland, stretching from the North Sea shoreline inland through the fertile Strathmore valley to the high ground of the Angus Glens and the fringes of the Cairngorms.
Forfar is the county town and administrative centre, while Arbroath on the coast is the largest settlement — a town with deep historical significance as the place where the Declaration of Arbroath was signed in 1320.
The area divides naturally into three bands: the coastal strip with its harbours, beaches, and golf links; the broad agricultural plain of Strathmore running through the middle; and the Highland glens — Clova, Prosen, Isla, Esk, and Lethnot — that reach northward into the mountains.
Angus has a strong identity shaped by farming, fishing, and food — the Arbroath smokie and the Forfar bridie are both nationally recognised, and the soft fruit industry around Blairgowrie and Strathmore has been a mainstay for generations.
Transport links include the main east coast rail line serving Arbroath, Carnoustie, and Montrose, the A90 dual carriageway connecting Dundee to Aberdeen, and a network of rural roads that reach into some of the most scenic and least-visited parts of Highland Scotland.
About Top Banana
Top Banana lists one trusted local business per trade, per area. One spot, one business — no paid rankings, no clutter. If the spot in your area is available, it could be yours.