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Galashiels is a railway station on the Borders Railway, which runs between Edinburgh Waverley and Tweedbank. The station, situated 33 miles 22 chains (54 km) south-east of Edinburgh Waverley, serves the town of Galashiels in Scottish Borders, Scotland. It is owned by Network Rail and managed by ScotRail.
Upload another image Cornmill Square, Monument To Sir Walter Scott 55°36′54″N 2°48′26″W / 55.614986°N 2.807355°W / 55.614986; -2.807355 (Cornmill Square, Monument To Sir Walter Scott) Category C(S) 31980 Upload Photo Dale Street, Netherdale Mill 55°36′32″N 2°47′07″W / 55.608812°N 2.78537°W / 55.608812; -2.78537 (Dale Street, Netherdale ...
Tweedbank is a large village south-east of Galashiels in the Scottish Borders. It is part of the county of Roxburghshire. It is an outer suburb of Galashiels, on the other (eastern) side of the River Tweed. The population of Tweedbank at the latest census is 2,101. [2]
The TD postcode area, also known as the Galashiels postcode area, [2] is a group of fifteen postcode districts in south-east Scotland and the far north-east of England, within seventeen post towns.
In 1975, local government across Scotland was reformed under the Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973. The burghs and counties were abolished as administrative areas and replaced with a two-tier system of upper-tier regions and lower-tier districts. Galashiels therefore became part of the Ettrick and Lauderdale district within the Borders ...
High Sunderland is a Modernist house built in woodland in the grounds of the 19th-century Sunderland Hall, between Selkirk and Galashiels in the Scottish Borders.It was designed in 1957 by Peter Womersley for the textile artist Bernat Klein and his wife Peggy, and completed in 1958.
In 2005, Scottish Borders Council considered an application by a property developer to build a housing estate on the opposite bank of the River Tweed from Abbotsford, to which Historic Scotland and the National Trust for Scotland objected. [15] [16] There have been modifications to the proposed development, but it is still being opposed in 2020 ...
The Selkirk and Galashiels Railway was a railway company that built a branch line connecting Selkirk, Scottish Borders, with the mainline network at Galashiels. The 5-mile (8.0 km) line opened in 1856 and was well used in the period down to 1914.