No sawmill listed in Edinburgh New Town yet.
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For Sawmills
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- Only one Sawmill spot in Edinburgh New Town
- Your business, top of the pile - no ads, no rivals, no noise
- £40/month - cancel anytime
About Sawmills
A sawmill processes raw logs into seasoned timber, sleepers, beams, cladding and firewood - typically working with locally felled hardwoods like oak, ash and beech alongside softwood from managed forestry.
Kiln-dried timber is moisture-controlled for indoor use; air-dried timber suits external work but takes longer to season - ask which you need before ordering.
Many sawmills also stock kindling, hardwood logs by the cube or sack and bespoke milled lengths for joinery or fencing - call ahead for stock, especially in winter.
- timber supplier
- kiln-dried logs
- firewood supplier
- log delivery
- milled timber
About Edinburgh New Town
Edinburgh's New Town is a masterpiece of Georgian town planning, laid out in the 1760s on a grid of broad streets, elegant crescents and private gardens north of Princes Street.
It remains one of the most desirable residential addresses in Scotland, with grand townhouses converted into flats alongside offices, galleries and restaurants.
George Street, Queen Street and the streets between them house a mix of professional services, high-end retail and some of the city's best bars and restaurants.
The New Town Gardens - private communal gardens enclosed by the streets - are one of Edinburgh's most distinctive features, giving residents green space in the heart of the city.
The area has excellent transport connections, with Waverley and Haymarket stations both within walking distance and bus routes running along every main street.
About Edinburgh
Edinburgh is Scotland's capital city and one of the most recognisable cities in the world, built across a series of volcanic hills on the southern shore of the Firth of Forth.
The Old Town and New Town, together a UNESCO World Heritage Site, form the historic core - but the city stretches far beyond them, taking in dozens of distinct neighbourhoods, suburbs and villages absorbed over centuries of growth.
From the Georgian terraces of the New Town to the seaside promenade at Portobello, the leafy avenues of Morningside to the waterfront regeneration at Granton, each part of Edinburgh has its own character and community.
The city is a centre for finance, technology, higher education and the arts - the Edinburgh Festival Fringe is the largest arts festival in the world and the city's universities attract students and researchers from across the globe.
Edinburgh's transport network includes a tram line, an extensive bus system, two mainline railway stations and an international airport, connecting its neighbourhoods to each other and to the rest of Scotland and beyond.
See what claiming looks like
Lothian Flooring Company claimed their flooring specialist spot in Musselburgh.