🍳 Kitchen Fitter in Dalmellington, East Ayrshire
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For Kitchen Fitters
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- Only one Kitchen Fitter spot in Dalmellington
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- £40/month — cancel anytime
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Nobody’s stepped up in Dalmellington yet.
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About Kitchen Fitters
A kitchen fitter assembles and installs kitchen units, worktops, appliances, and associated plumbing and electrical connections.
A skilled fitter can make the difference between a kitchen that looks right and one that works perfectly for years.
Agree the full scope in writing before work starts, including who supplies appliances and who handles the electrical and plumbing connections.
About Dalmellington
Dalmellington is a small town in the Doon Valley in the south of East Ayrshire, around 14 miles south-east of Ayr on the A713 road. It sits at the southern end of Loch Doon, the largest loch in Ayrshire, which lies within the Galloway Forest Park. The valley landscape here is open and rugged, with the hills of the Southern Uplands forming an impressive backdrop. Human settlement in the area dates back some 6,000 years to the first post-glacial inhabitants.
Loch Doon Castle is the area's most significant historic monument. Built by the Bruce earls of Carrick in the late thirteenth century — possibly during the time of Robert the Bruce himself — the castle originally stood on a small island in the loch. When the loch level was raised in the 1930s for a hydroelectric scheme, the castle was carefully dismantled stone by stone and rebuilt on the mainland shore, where it stands today.
Dalmellington has a strong industrial heritage. The Dalmellington Iron Company established extensive ironworks at Waterside, around 3 miles downstream, in 1847, exploiting the rich deposits of iron ore and coal in the Doon Valley. The works were among the largest in Ayrshire and operated for decades before eventual closure. The Scottish Industrial Railway Centre at Dunaskin preserves this heritage with a collection of industrial locomotives and equipment.
Today Dalmellington is a quiet community serving as a gateway to Loch Doon and the surrounding uplands. The area is popular with walkers, anglers and those exploring the Galloway and Southern Ayrshire Biosphere. Local services are modest, and the town is connected by road to Ayr in the north and to Dumfries and Galloway to the south.
Nearby: Cumnock, Muirkirk, New Cumnock, Patna
About East Ayrshire
East Ayrshire is one of Scotland's 32 unitary council areas, created in 1996 when the Local Government etc. (Scotland) Act 1994 merged the former Kilmarnock and Loudoun and Cumnock and Doon Valley districts. It covers around 1,262 square kilometres of south-west Scotland, making it the fourteenth-largest council area by land area. Kilmarnock is the main town and administrative centre, home to the majority of the area's population of around 122,000.
The landscape shifts considerably as you move across East Ayrshire. The north and west are characterised by undulating lowland farmland — rolling green countryside associated with the famous Ayrshire dairy cattle. Moving east and south, the terrain rises steadily into moorland and forested uplands, eventually reaching Blackcraig Hill at around 700 metres. The River Irvine runs through the valley towns of the north, while the River Ayr and its tributaries drain the central and southern parishes, flowing past towns like Muirkirk and Cumnock.
East Ayrshire has deep roots in Scottish industrial history. Coal mining, iron making and textile production transformed the area during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The Irvine Valley became internationally renowned for its lace curtain and muslin weaving, while the coalfields around Cumnock and New Cumnock powered much of the region's growth. Kilmarnock produced a remarkable variety of goods — bonnets, shoes, railway engines, carpets and whisky — earning it a reputation as one of the most industrially diverse towns in Scotland. The area also has strong associations with Robert Burns, who farmed at Mossgiel near Mauchline and drew heavily on local people and places for his poetry.
The decline of heavy industry from the 1970s onwards left significant economic challenges across East Ayrshire, particularly in the former mining communities of the south. Today the public sector is the largest employer, with East Ayrshire Council and NHS Ayrshire and Arran providing a substantial share of local jobs. In rural areas, agriculture remains important, particularly dairy farming in the north and west. The area has attracted inward investment in manufacturing and logistics, and tourism — centred on the Burns connection, country parks and the Galloway and Southern Ayrshire Biosphere — plays a growing role.
Transport connections are reasonably good in the north of the area. The M77 motorway runs from Glasgow and terminates near Fenwick, becoming the A77 dual carriageway south towards Kilmarnock and beyond. Kilmarnock itself sits on the Glasgow South Western rail line, with regular services into Glasgow Central. The A76 links the southern towns through Cumnock and Mauchline towards Dumfries, while the A713 provides the main route south through the Doon Valley to Dalmellington and into Dumfries and Galloway. Rural parts of the area, particularly in the south, are considerably more reliant on private transport.
Nearby: Dumfries and Galloway, South Ayrshire, South Lanarkshire
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