🏠 Roofer in Turnberry, South Ayrshire

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About Roofers

A roofer repairs and replaces roofs - fixing missing or broken tiles, repointing chimney stacks, replacing lead flashings, and installing new roofs on extensions or full replacements.

Finding a reliable local roofer before you have a problem is always a good idea.

Be wary of anyone who cold-knocks after a storm - reputable roofers don't need to.

About Turnberry

Turnberry is a small settlement on the Ayrshire coast, about five miles north of Girvan, known principally for its world-famous golf resort and its associations with Scottish royal history. It sits on a low headland at the southern end of Maidenhead Bay, with views across the Firth of Clyde to Ailsa Craig and the Kintyre peninsula.

Turnberry Castle, now a fragmentary ruin on the foreshore, was the seat of the Earls of Carrick and the birthplace — according to widely accepted tradition — of Robert the Bruce. The castle passed to the Bruce family when Robert de Brus married Marjorie, Countess of Carrick, in 1271, and their son, the future King of Scots, was born here. Robert the Bruce ordered the castle's destruction in 1310 to deny it to the English, and it was never rebuilt. The lighthouse that stands beside the ruins was designed by David and Thomas Stevenson and completed in 1873.

Turnberry Hotel — now the Trump Turnberry resort — opened in 1906 and has hosted the Open Championship four times, most recently in 2009. The Ailsa Course is one of the most spectacular and challenging links courses in the world, with several holes played directly along the clifftop above the Firth of Clyde. The resort occupies a commanding position on the headland and is visible from miles along the coast.

Beyond the hotel and golf courses, Turnberry is a very small community with little in the way of a village centre. It is accessible by road from Girvan and Maybole and lies close to other Carrick villages including Maidens and Kirkoswald.

Nearby: Girvan, Kirkoswald, Maidens, Maybole

About South Ayrshire

South Ayrshire coat of arms

South Ayrshire is a council area in south-west Scotland, stretching from the outskirts of Ayr south along the Firth of Clyde coastline to Ballantrae and inland across the hills of Carrick to the fringes of Galloway. It covers 472 square miles and had a population of around 112,000 at the 2021 census.

The region divides broadly into two historic districts: Kyle in the north, centred on Ayr and the fertile lowland farms between the coast and the Carrick hills, and Carrick to the south — a wilder, more sparsely populated landscape of river valleys, moorland, and coastal cliffs dominated for centuries by the powerful Kennedy family, who styled themselves Kings of Carrick. The boundary between the two runs roughly through Maybole.

South Ayrshire is inseparable from the life and work of Robert Burns, Scotland's national poet, who was born at Alloway in 1759 and spent his formative years in the villages and farms of the surrounding area. Alloway, Tarbolton, Kirkoswald, Maybole, and Ayr itself all carry tangible connections to Burns and together form what is known as Burns Country — one of Scotland's most visited literary landscapes.

The economy is built around public services, retail, tourism, and agriculture, with aerospace engineering and freight handling at Glasgow Prestwick Airport adding a significant industrial component. Ayr racecourse, Royal Troon golf course, and the coastline bring considerable visitor numbers throughout the year. Culzean Castle — the National Trust for Scotland's most visited property — draws visitors to the clifftop estate south of Maybole.

Transport connections run north–south along the coast: the A77 trunk road and the electrified Ayrshire Coast railway line link Ayr and Prestwick to Glasgow in under an hour, while services continue south to Girvan and Stranraer. Glasgow Prestwick Airport, located between Ayr and Prestwick, is the region's international gateway and a significant employer.

Nearby: Dumfries and Galloway, East Ayrshire

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