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About Groundworkers

A groundworker handles the unseen work that supports a building - excavation, foundations, drainage runs, sub-bases, site clearance and grading - everything below ground level before the bricklayers and joiners arrive.

Get a soil and ground-conditions check on any site you don't already know - clay, made-up ground or peat each call for different foundation strategies and ignoring this is the most expensive mistake on a build.

Make sure any drainage work is signed off in writing - groundworks that fail building control later are a nightmare to retrofit once a slab has been poured.

Also covers:
  • excavation
  • foundations
  • drainage runs
  • site preparation
  • ground works

About Pittenweem

Pittenweem is a working fishing village in the East Neuk of Fife - its harbour is the most active in the area, with boats landing prawns and lobster daily.

The village takes its name from the Pictish for 'place of the cave', referring to St Fillan's Cave, a 7th-century hermit's retreat that can still be visited below the priory.

Pittenweem hosts an annual Arts Festival each August that transforms houses, gardens and public buildings into exhibition spaces, drawing thousands of visitors.

The village has a steep, attractive High Street lined with traditional Fife vernacular buildings - crow-stepped gables, pantiled roofs and colourfully painted facades.

About Fife

Fife coat of arms(opens in new tab)

Fife is a large peninsula in eastern Scotland, bounded by the Firth of Forth to the south and the Firth of Tay to the north - a geography that has given it a distinct identity and earned it the traditional title of 'The Kingdom of Fife'.

Dunfermline is the largest settlement and a former capital of Scotland, granted city status in 2022, while Glenrothes serves as the administrative centre and St Andrews is known worldwide as the home of golf and Scotland's oldest university.

The south-west of Fife has a strong industrial heritage - coal mining and shipbuilding shaped towns like Cowdenbeath, Lochgelly and Rosyth - while the East Neuk coastline is defined by a string of picturesque fishing villages: Anstruther, Crail, Pittenweem and St Monans.

Inland, the Howe of Fife is fertile agricultural land dotted with market towns like Cupar, Auchtermuchty and Falkland, the last of these home to a beautifully preserved Renaissance palace.

Fife is well connected to Edinburgh via the Forth Road Bridge and Queensferry Crossing and to Dundee via the Tay Road Bridge, making much of the region practical for commuters while retaining a strong sense of local identity.

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