Kinlochleven

Kinlochleven

Kinlochleven ( "Ceann Loch Lìobhann" in Gaelic ) is a village in Lochaber, Highland, Scotland and lies at the eastern end of Loch Leven, a sea loch cutting into the western Scottish Highlands. To the north lies the Mamores ridge; to the south lie the mountains flanking Glen Coe. The village was dominated by an aluminium processing plant, powered by a hydroelectric scheme situated in the mountains above.

The hydroelectric scheme was constructed in 1907 for the British Aluminium Company (later merged with Alcan) and was designed by engineer brothers Patrick and Charles Meik. Chief assistant resident engineer on the project was a young William Halcrow.

The scheme involved the construction of a gravity dam over 914 m long (the longest in the Highlands) and 27 m high, creating the Blackwater Reservoir. It was built at an elevation of over 305 m in rugged and almost inaccessible terrain, and involved the construction of some 6 km of concrete aqueduct and nearly 13 km of steel pipe. It has been described as the last major creation of the traditional 'navvy' whose activities in the construction of canals and railways left an indelible mark on the British countryside.

During the Second World War Corporal James Hendry, a Canadian serviceman, won the George Cross for the heroism he displayed during a fire and subsequent explosion at a powder house used for building of the tunnel which brings water to the plant.

At its early days the Aluminium Reduction Plant employed some 700 people, but its small size in comparison to modern 'smelters (US)', led to its closure in 2000. The revamping of the power station saw the transfer of its output to the Lochaber Smelter at Fort William. The Kinlochleven Land Development Trust, a partnership consisting the local Community, Alcan, Lochaber Enterprise, The Highland Council and Scottish Natural Heritage, supported by other agencies in Scotland and the European Union and chaired by Highland Councillor Drew McFarlane-Slack led the economic revival of the village. To date environmental improvements, new business pavilions, extensive path works, decontamination works have contributed to successful stability and growth in the village and its surrounding area.

In 1991, the village (according to Annual Census returns) had just over 1000 inhabitants in some 420 households. It has a post office and a handful of hotels and hostels popular with walkers following the West Highland Way. A building, which was formerly a coke bunker for carbon production for the Reduction Works, has now (2004) been transformed into a major mountain activity centre, known as the [http://www.ice-factor.co.uk Ice Factor] , and includes the world's highest indoor ice-climbing facility, the UK's highest indoor articulated rock climbing wall and bouldering facility.

The Ice Factor's founder and Managing Director Jamie Smith has continued the multi-million pound investment into Kinlochleven with a new bar-bistro, mountaineering shop and cafeteria. The Ice Factor has won a number of top tourism and industry awards including Entrepreneur of the Year, Visit Scotland Tourism Business of the Year and voted the Nation's favourite lottery funded project Fact|date=May 2008. The village is now visited by over 100,000 visitors per year and has become one of the top five visitor attractions in the Highlands of Scotland Fact|date=May 2008. Kinlochleven was visited by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth and His Royal Highness Prince Philip; marking the village's evolution from its past dependence on the aluminium industry, to its new status of being a valuable contributor to the Scottish tourism and leisure sector.

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* [http://www.walkinginscotland.org The West Highland Way] The last town before Fort William and finish.


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