🧱 Bricklayer in Bridgend, West Lothian
This one’s up for grabs.
For Bricklayers
Wide open.
- Only one Bricklayer spot in Bridgend
- Your business, top of the pile — no ads, no rivals, no noise
- £40/month — cancel anytime
Need a bricklayer?
Nobody’s stepped up in Bridgend 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 Bridgend
Bridgend is a small village on the southern edge of Linlithgow, sitting where the old road crossed the Water of Avon before the modern bypass was built.
Its position at the foot of the Bathgate Hills gives it a rural feel despite its proximity to Linlithgow, with good walking access to the surrounding hill country.
Linlithgow's full range of amenities — including the railway station, the loch, and the high street — is within easy reach.
About West Lothian
West Lothian is a council area in the heart of the central belt, sitting between Edinburgh to the east, Falkirk to the north, and North Lanarkshire to the west.
It is a county of contrasts: historic royal burghs like Linlithgow and ancient villages like Torphichen sit alongside the new town of Livingston and the former mining and shale oil communities that shaped the landscape in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Livingston is the county's main centre — Scotland's fifth-largest settlement — but West Lothian's character is defined as much by its smaller towns: Bathgate, Broxburn, Whitburn, and Linlithgow each have their own distinct identity.
The oil shale industry, pioneered here in the 1850s by James Young, left a lasting mark on the landscape in the form of distinctive pink bings — the waste heaps of the shale works — that have become recognised landmarks in their own right.
West Lothian has excellent transport connections, with the M8 and M9 crossing the county, two rail lines linking it to Edinburgh and Glasgow, and Edinburgh Airport on its eastern edge.
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