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🧱 Bricklayer in Shotts, North Lanarkshire

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For Bricklayers

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About Bricklayers

A bricklayer builds and repairs structures using bricks, blocks, and mortar - from garden walls, pillars, and steps to extensions, foundations, and chimney rebuilds.

Brickwork is structural and visible, so quality matters on both counts - a good bricklayer works level, plumb, and consistent with clean joints throughout.

For any work on a shared or boundary wall, check whether your project requires a building warrant under Scottish building regulations before the first brick is laid.

About Shotts

Shotts is a small town in the south-east of North Lanarkshire, sitting on relatively high ground on the plateau between the Clyde and Forth valleys. The Kirk o' Shotts has been a landmark on this exposed hilltop for centuries.

Shotts railway station is on the Glasgow to Edinburgh via Shotts line, giving residents direct rail access to both cities.

The surrounding landscape is open and rural, with farmland and moorland stretching in all directions. Shotts offers some of the most affordable housing in the North Lanarkshire area.

About North Lanarkshire

North Lanarkshire coat of arms(opens in new tab)

North Lanarkshire is a council area in the heart of Scotland's central belt, stretching from the eastern outskirts of Glasgow through a string of towns and former mining communities to the open moorland of the central plateau.

Motherwell and Coatbridge are the largest towns, both shaped by their industrial past — Motherwell was one of Scotland's great steelmaking centres until the closure of Ravenscraig in 1992, while Coatbridge earned the nickname 'the Iron Burgh' for the concentration of ironworks that once dominated the town.

The north of the council area includes Cumbernauld, one of Scotland's post-war new towns, and Kilsyth, an older settlement nestled beneath the Kilsyth Hills. Airdrie, in the east, has been transformed by the Airdrie-Bathgate rail link into a well-connected commuter town for both Glasgow and Edinburgh.

The area has a strong working-class heritage and a proud community identity that shows in its local football clubs, gala days, and community organisations. Regeneration of former industrial sites, including the massive Ravenscraig development, continues to reshape the physical landscape.

Transport links are excellent, with the M8, M73, M74, and M80 motorways crossing the area and multiple railway lines connecting its towns to Glasgow, Edinburgh, and Stirling — making North Lanarkshire one of the most accessible parts of the central belt.

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