Country: | Scotland |
Static Image Name: | Seafield, West Lothian.jpg |
Static Image Caption: | New housing in Seafield overlooks the Almond |
Coordinates: | 55.877°N -3.589°W |
Official Name: | Seafield |
Label Position: | bottom |
Population Ref: | |
Os Grid Reference: | NT007660 |
Lieutenancy Scotland: | West Lothian |
Unitary Scotland: | West Lothian |
Constituency Westminster: | Livingston |
Constituency Scottish Parliament: | Almond Valley |
Post Town: | BATHGATE |
Postcode District: | EH47 |
Postcode Area: | EH |
Dial Code: | 01506 |
Seafield is a small village in West Lothian, Scotland. Seafield lies NaNmiles east of Blackburn, 2miles southeast of Bathgate and 3 miles (4.8 km) west of Livingston.
The village lies between the River Almond to the south and the M8 motorway to the north.
Seafield has many good community amenities such as a primary school, community centre, shop, hotel, bowling club and annual Gala day.
Notably, Seafield is the birthplace of the now-defunct[1] Seafield & District Pipe Band, which for many years focused on teaching children and teenagers to play the pipes and drums. The band is associated with successful solo bagpiper Chris Armstrong, who served as a piping tutor for the band and then as its Pipe Major in 1998;[2] Armstrong's 1997 debut album, Notes In Ma Heid, features a track called Saney MacKenzie,[3] named after and in tribute to the band's founder, snare drummer Alexander Mackenzie (who was affectionately known as "Sanny" to friends).
Situated just outside Seafield is Blackburn House. This is an A-listed building built in 1772 by George Moncrieff.[4]
Seafield grew principally to provide housing for coal and oil-shale mine workers, with three poorer-quality rows north of the road demolished but two later, well-built terraces of miners' rows on the south side now restored in the centre of the village. The oil-shale works north of the village were cleared by the 1960s, leaving a large oil-shale bing (tip). The County Council then used the works site and the adjacent peat moss as its main domestic refuse tip until the 1980s. This generated serious water pollution problems, aggravated by outflow being east towards the New Town of Livingston. One of the last large-scale Scottish Enterprise-led land reclamation schemes, in the 1990s, utilised the spent shale (which is inert, having been retorted at high temperature) to blind over the tip, with full pollution control measures.
Seafield Bing itself was remodelled to a design brief by West Lothian Planners, to resemble the natural basalt sills and lava flow landscapes of the Bathgate Hills and Fife, with a serrated crestline, and a proper summit now estimated at 198m asl in height, and renamed with approval of the Community Council "Seafield Law", appearing thus on latest Ordnance Survey maps. The wooded setting is a popular local recreational area.