🧱 Bricklayer in Innerleithen, Scottish Borders
This one’s up for grabs.
For Bricklayers
Wide open.
- Only one Bricklayer spot in Innerleithen
- Your business, top of the pile — no ads, no rivals, no noise
- £40/month — cancel anytime
Need a bricklayer?
Nobody’s stepped up in Innerleithen yet.
Drop your email — we’ll shout when someone local takes it.
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 Innerleithen
Innerleithen is a small town on the River Tweed between Peebles and Galashiels, known nationally as one of Scotland's premier mountain biking destinations.
The Innerleithen trails and nearby Glentress Forest form part of the 7stanes network and have hosted World Cup downhill events.
The town has a textile heritage — Robert Smail's Printing Works, run by the National Trust for Scotland, preserves a Victorian letterpress workshop in working order.
Innerleithen has a strong community spirit, an annual festival called the Cleikum Ceremonies, and a high street with local shops and cafes.
St Ronan's Wells, the mineral spring that once made the town a spa destination, connects it to Sir Walter Scott's novel of the same name.
About Scottish Borders
The Scottish Borders is the largest council area in southern Scotland, stretching from the edge of Edinburgh and East Lothian in the north to the English border in the south.
It is a landscape of rolling hills, river valleys, and market towns — the Tweed, Teviot, Ettrick, and Yarrow rivers carve through countryside that has been fought over, farmed, and written about for centuries.
Hawick and Galashiels are the largest towns, but the region's character is shaped by a string of smaller burghs — Kelso, Jedburgh, Peebles, Melrose, and Selkirk — each with its own abbey ruins, common riding traditions, or rugby loyalties.
The Borders Railway, reopened in 2015, connects Tweedbank and Galashiels to Edinburgh Waverley, bringing the northern Borders within commuting distance of the capital for the first time in decades.
The region is known for its textile heritage, its abbeys, and an outdoor culture built around hill walking, fishing, mountain biking, and rugby — a place where community identity runs deep and the landscape is never far away.
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