🪟 Glazier in Kirkconnel, Dumfries and Galloway
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- Only one Glazier spot in Kirkconnel
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Nobody’s stepped up in Kirkconnel yet.
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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 Kirkconnel
Kirkconnel is a former mining village in upper Nithsdale, sitting on the River Nith alongside its twin village of Kelloholm.
The village grew around the coal mines that served the Nithsdale coalfield, and the mining heritage is central to the community's identity — the last pit closed in the 1960s.
Kirkconnel has a war memorial, a community centre, and local shops, and the surrounding hills offer walking routes into the Southern Uplands.
The village sits on the A76 between Sanquhar and Cumnock, with a rail station on the Glasgow South Western line providing connections to Dumfries and Kilmarnock.
About Dumfries and Galloway
Dumfries and Galloway is the most south-westerly council area in Scotland, stretching from the English border at Gretna to the Mull of Galloway — the southernmost point in Scotland — and from the Solway Firth coast inland to the hills of the Southern Uplands.
Dumfries is the largest town and administrative centre, a handsome red sandstone burgh on the River Nith where Robert Burns spent the last years of his life and is buried in St Michael's Kirkyard.
The region divides naturally into three historic areas: Dumfriesshire to the east, Kirkcudbrightshire (the Stewartry) in the centre, and Wigtownshire to the west — each with its own character, landscape, and loyalties.
The Galloway coast and countryside have a mild climate influenced by the Gulf Stream, fertile farmland, dark-sky reserves, and a string of small harbour towns that attract artists, writers, and visitors drawn to the quiet and the landscape.
Despite its size, the region is one of the most sparsely populated in Scotland — a place where community is strong, the pace is slower, and the landscape ranges from river valleys and rolling farmland to wild moorland and rocky coastline.
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