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Kirkcaldy Sheriff Court, formerly known as County Buildings, is a judicial building on Whytescauseway in Kirkcaldy in Scotland. The building, which continues to operate a courthouse, is a Category B listed building .
That effort will, the city hopes, avert illegal dumping along the island's roadsides and around its neighborhoods in favor of properly disposing residential solid waste, green waste and metal ...
PaintCare, Inc. is a non-profit product stewardship organization created by the paint industry in states to handle waste paint that have passed paint stewardship laws [1] PaintCare establishes drop-off locations where the public can dispose of leftover paint for recycling, re-use, or other appropriate management. [2]
Site of the colliery, now a housing estate. Seafield Colliery was in Kirkcaldy, Fife, Scotland. Work on the colliery was started on 12 May 1954 and production began in 1966. [1] On 10 May 1973, five men were killed when a roof collapsed.
The Mercat Shopping Centre (/ ˈ m ɛ r k ə t / MERR-kət) [1] is located in Kirkcaldy, Fife, Scotland, United Kingdom.The Mercat has one anchor store; TK Maxx.The Mercat – including surrounding areas – accounts for at least 30% of all the floorspace in Kirkcaldy town centre, which in total is 46,000-square-metre (500,000 sq ft) and providing as much as 200 shops, making Kirkcaldy the ...
In 1977, Ricky Grant took over the ownership of the track and added floodlights and refurbished the site. He put the six acre stadium on the market in April 1998 asking £200,000 for it. [4] Races are held over 100, 300, 500 and 680 yards (mainly handicaps).
Kirkcaldy (Scottish Gaelic: Dùn Phàrlain, Scots: Dunfaurlin) was a local government district in the Fife region of Scotland from 1975 to 1996. The district was named after the town of Kirkcaldy but also covered a wider area, including the Fife regional capital of Glenrothes .
A 19th-century building in Kirkcaldy, near the location of the house of Adam Smith's mother, where Smith lived from 1767 to 1776, and wrote The Wealth of Nations. Adam Smith lived with his mother, in her house, in Kirkcaldy, Scotland, from 1767 to 1776. That house, on the High Street, is where he wrote The Wealth of Nations.