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About Alarm Installers

An alarm installer fits, services and monitors home and business security systems - intruder alarms, CCTV cameras, access control and smoke or flood detectors.

Wireless systems are easier to retrofit and don't require chasing into walls; wired systems are more reliable for larger properties or those expecting heavy use.

Insurers often want a NACOSS or SSAIB-approved installer for monitored systems if you want a discount on your home or commercial cover, so ask before commissioning the work.

Also covers:
  • burglar alarm
  • intruder alarm
  • CCTV installation
  • monitored security
  • access control

About Darvel

Darvel is a small town at the eastern end of the Irvine Valley, around 14 miles east of Kilmarnock. It is the highest of the three main valley towns and sits close to the moorland rising towards South Lanarkshire. Unlike Galston and Newmilns, Darvel is a relatively young settlement, having grown from a cluster of cottages into a planned town in 1754 when John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun, laid it out to provide housing and employment for families displaced by agricultural change.

The town's development was dominated by the lace industry. Alexander Morton, an entrepreneur and weaver, brought the first lace power loom to Darvel in 1875. His company, Alexander Morton & Co, expanded rapidly and within a decade was operating lace looms around the clock. By the early twentieth century Darvel was an internationally significant centre for high-quality lace and Madras muslin production, exporting goods across Europe and beyond.

Darvel is the birthplace of Sir Alexander Fleming, the bacteriologist who discovered penicillin in 1928. Fleming was born in a farmhouse near the town in 1881 and the connection is commemorated locally. His discovery, one of the most consequential in the history of medicine, is a source of considerable local pride.

Today Darvel is a peaceful community at the gateway to the upper Irvine Valley. The lace industry has largely gone, but some manufacturing continues in the area. The town is surrounded by open countryside and moorland and provides a quieter, more rural character than the towns further down the valley.

About East Ayrshire

East Ayrshire coat of arms(opens in new tab)

East Ayrshire is a council area in south-west Scotland, stretching from the lowland farmland north of Kilmarnock through the Irvine and Garnock valleys to the moorland and forested uplands of the southern hills.

Kilmarnock is the administrative centre and largest town, with a proud industrial heritage that ranges from carpet-making and engineering to whisky - it was here that Johnnie Walker began blending Scotch in the 19th century. The town is also home to Kilmarnock FC, one of the oldest football clubs in Scotland, and serves as the commercial hub for the wider area.

The smaller towns and villages each have their own character. Cumnock and New Cumnock in the south were shaped by coal mining, Stewarton and Galston in the Irvine Valley have roots in textiles and dairy farming and Mauchline is closely associated with Robert Burns, who farmed nearby at Mossgiel and drew on the local people and landscape for much of his poetry.

The north of the area is rolling farmland - green countryside long associated with Ayrshire dairy cattle - while the south rises into open moorland, forestry and the fringes of the Galloway hills. The contrast between the populated northern towns and the quieter rural south gives East Ayrshire a varied character within a relatively compact area.

The M77 motorway connects Kilmarnock to Glasgow, with rail services on the Glasgow South Western line providing regular trains to Glasgow Central. The A76 links the southern towns through Cumnock toward Dumfries, while the A77 runs south toward Ayr, making Kilmarnock a well-connected base for the wider Ayrshire region.

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