Blindwells Explained

Country:Scotland
Official Name:Blindwells

Blindwells is a new town under construction in East Lothian, Scotland.

A former open-cast coal mine north of Tranent on the north-east side of the A1, just east of the Prestonpans/Tranent junction, adjacent to the estates of the Earl of Wemyss and March. As of plans in 2010 it was intended that the Blindwells settlement will initially consist of around 1,600 houses, and is part of East Lothian's planned 4,800 house total.[1]

Proposed settlement

The settlement was to include its own community centre, pre-school facility, primary and secondary schools and commercial aspects. Though the planned 1,600 houses implies a smaller development than the Scottish New Towns created in the sixties, this could be expanded to accommodate another 2,500 to 3,000 houses in the future, for which a total of 130 hectares were earmarked.[2]

Older maps also show a cluster of buildings at Riggonhead, on the bank to the south-east of the main pond, at NT416752, but all that remained were earth mounds which were frequently used by scrambler bikes.

In preparation for the new town development a series of man-made earth embankments were constructed in 2009 for the purpose of settlement tests, i.e. to demonstrate that the site is stable enough to be built on.[3]

By October 2023 150 houses were completed and occuppied, with 5 housing companies active, or about to commence building, on the site and plans for a new town centre had been submitted for approval.[4] Work on the new primary school started in 2024 and it is due for completion in the Spring of 2025.[5]

Wildlife

There has long been a pool on the northern part of the site and this had attracted a good range of bird species as it was one of the few standing open waters in East Lothian. Waterbirds regularly seen here included mute swan*, mallard*, common teal, wigeon, tufted duck, little grebe*, moorhen* and coot* (* confirmed breeding since 2008 [6]). Gadwall also bred in 2012 with two broods seen in 2014 and a further expansion since. Regular counts are undertaken for BTO Wetland Bird Survey (WeBS) monitoring.[7] Other characteristic birds of the site include grey partridge*, common kestrel, common buzzard, stock dove, skylark*, common grasshopper warbler, sedge warbler*, tree sparrow, reed bunting* and yellowhammer*, with altogether 29 species confirmed to breed in the period 2008-2013, with 17 "probable" breeders and a further 9 "possible" breeders (using BTO Atlas classifications [8]). Scarcer species recorded include little egret, common shelduck, garganey, northern shoveler, greater scaup, smew (drake plus 3 redheads, Feb 2012[9]), marsh harrier (occasional extended presence), hen harrier (18 November 2014), merlin, common quail, a total of 18 species of wading bird including little ringed plover, wood sandpiper, green sandpiper, spotted redshank, black-tailed godwit and bar-tailed godwit, also short-eared owl, barn owl, common cuckoo, common kingfisher, lesser whitethroat, garden warbler and water pipit (15 March 2015); long-eared owls bred on the perimeter of the site in 2017. There was rich insect fauna too with nine species of dragonfly and damselfly having been recorded[10] including the rare Red-veined Darter (Sympetrum fonscolombii) (2nd record for Lothian) and Black Darter (Sympetrum danae), together with common breeding species Emerald Damselfly (Lestes sponsa), Azure Damselfly (Coenagrion puella), Common Blue Damselfly (Enallagma cyathigerum), Blue-tailed Damselfly (Ischnura elegans), and scarcer breeders Common Hawker (Aeshna juncea), Four-spotted Chaser(Libellula quadrimaculata) and Common Darter (Sympetrum striolatum). There was a colony of grayling[11] and also narrow-bordered five-spot burnet moth, which is currently on the edge of its UK range in this part of Scotland (photo, right).[12] The pond supported abundant amphibians, including smooth newt, attracting Grey Herons.

Note: the main pond, a precious habitat for the above species, was completely eliminated in its existing form in the early phases of developments for the new settlement in the fourth week of August 2018, ending one of the best wildlife sites in the local area. The subsequent year has seen much expansion of the earthworks on the site, with the remaining smaller pool (to the east end of the area occupied by the former "natural" pool) still attracting many gulls, and also occasionally small numbers of wildfowl and waders, but it is now entirely "artificial" in nature.

Minewater treatment scheme

A reed bed treatment scheme for minewater, covering an area of 2.5 ha, has been constructed to the east of the natural pond at Blindwells. It consists of a 30 m long precast concrete cascade, 1.2 m deep conditioning zone and 3 N° reed beds with associated inlet and outlet structures. The reed bed levels have been designed to give a gravity flow through the system and also a piped bypass system.[13] The photos here were taken in April 2009 when the reedbeds had only just begun to develop; by summer 2012 there was no sign of open water as dense vegetation was covering each of the pools. Reed harvest commenced spring 2015.[14]

See also

References

55.957°N -2.936°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: New Development: Blindwells . 1 June 2021 . East Lothian Council.
  2. Web site: Blindwells, East Lothian: Tranent Housing. www.edinburgharchitecture.co.uk. 4 October 2016 .
  3. Web site: Developers use man-made hills in land test. www.scotsman.com . https://web.archive.org/web/20191205035120/https://www.scotsman.com/news-2-15012/developers-use-man-made-hills-in-land-test-1-1193991 . 2019-12-05.
  4. Web site: Blindwells town centre plans submitted for approval . Peter A. Walker . 2 October 2023 . 14 August 2024 . insider.co.uk.
  5. Web site: Blindwells and Craighall primary schools to be complete next spring . Cameron Ritchie . 28 May 2024 . 14 August 2024 . East Lothian Courier.
  6. Web site: BIRDS IN SOUTH-EAST SCOTLAND 2007-13 . 1 June 2021 . Scottish Ornithologists Club.
  7. Web site: Wetland Bird Survey | BTO - British Trust for Ornithology. www.bto.org. 8 February 2018 .
  8. Web site: Bird Atlas 2007-11 | BTO - British Trust for Ornithology. www.bto.org. 2 February 2018 .
  9. Web site: Home - Birding Lothian . 20 July 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150516164922/http://www.birdinglothian.co.uk/#/2012-highlights/4572603415 . 16 May 2015 . dead .
  10. Web site: The Wildlife Information Centre - Recording at Dunglass. wildlifeinformation.co.uk.
  11. Web site: Lothian's Newsletter Issue 3 . Tom Delaney . 2012 . Butterfly Conservation Scotland.
  12. Web site: Narrow-bordered Five-spot Burnet Zygaena lonicerae - UKMoths. ukmoths.org.uk.
  13. Web site: 2010 to 2015 government policy: energy industry and infrastructure licensing and regulation. GOV.UK.
  14. Web site: Blindwells. 31 August 2015.