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- Only one Driveway Specialist spot in Stirling
- Your business, top of the pile - no ads, no rivals, no noise
- £40/month - cancel anytime
About Driveway Specialists
A driveway specialist lays new driveways and refurbishes existing ones - block paving, tarmac, resin-bound stone and concrete, including the sub-base and drainage that determine whether the surface lasts.
Front gardens of more than five square metres need planning permission unless the surface is permeable or drains to a soakaway, so check before laying impermeable materials.
Get the falls right - water should run off the driveway, not pool against the house - and ask for an SUDS-friendly approach if the area is prone to surface water.
- block paving
- tarmac driveway
- resin driveway
- monoblock
- paving contractor
About Stirling
Stirling is a historic city of around 37,000 people, sitting at the meeting point of the Lowlands and the Highlands on the River Forth.
Stirling Castle, perched on its volcanic crag, has been at the centre of Scottish history for centuries - a royal residence, a seat of power and the site of some of the most decisive moments in the Wars of Independence.
The Old Town climbs steeply from the castle down to the modern centre, with medieval closes, the Church of the Holy Rude and Argyll's Lodging along the way.
The National Wallace Monument stands on the Abbey Craig to the north-east, marking the site of William Wallace's victory at the Battle of Stirling Bridge in 1297.
The University of Stirling, with its campus set in parkland beneath the Ochil Hills, adds a student population and cultural life to a city that serves as the main commercial and administrative centre for the wider region.
About Stirling
Stirling is a council area stretching from the city of Stirling in the heart of Scotland's central belt northward and westward into the Trossachs, the Breadalbane hills and some of the most dramatic Highland landscape in the country.
The city of Stirling sits at the historic crossing point of the River Forth, the strategic gateway between the Lowlands and the Highlands - a position that made it one of the most fought-over places in Scottish history.
North of the city, the character changes rapidly: the lowland farmland of the Forth valley gives way to the lochs, forests and mountains of the Loch Lomond and The Trossachs National Park and further north to the remote glens of Breadalbane.
The council area takes in everything from suburban commuter towns like Bridge of Allan and Dunblane to Highland villages like Killin, Crianlarich and Tyndrum - an extraordinary range of landscape and settlement within a single local authority.
Transport links are strong around the city, with the M9, M80 and several rail lines converging on Stirling, though the Highland communities to the north rely on the A84, A85 and the scenic West Highland railway line.
See what claiming looks like
Lothian Flooring Company claimed their flooring specialist spot in Musselburgh.