The £9.6 million project to replace the Army Reserve Centre (ARC) at Dunfermline is making significant progress.
The building is wind and watertight, with the internal first fix well under way on all floors.
Offices – including the large, open-plan main space – are taking shape, as are the drill hall, industrial kitchen, bathrooms and shower rooms, transit accommodation, server and plant rooms.
External works are continuing with the recent installation of three high-efficiency air source heat pumps.
The electricity sub-station that will service the power needs of the new building is also in situ, although this still has to be connected to the main grid.
The latest phase of the project follows setbacks caused by the discovery of hazardous materials during initial groundworks. Additional works were undertaken to ensure there was nothing else of a historical nature buried on the site. This meant scanning the ground, then removing and replacing all of the potentially contaminated soil.
The site was then backfilled to allow 350 piles to be driven into the foundations in February. Work on pouring concrete for the foundations then began, with the building starting to rise out of the ground in April as blockwork was constructed above ground level. Steelwork was delivered to the site in early May with rapid progress being made on the main build since.
The Bruce House project had originally been due to get under way in March 2020. However COVID-19 hit and the national lockdown that followed halted all projects that weren’t already in progress.
In 2022 Henry Brothers won the contract to design and build the new ARC and demolish the existing Bruce House. Mott MacDonald is acting as the technical service provider, supporting the Highland RFCA Estates team. The Army-funded project is due to be completed in 2025.
The Dunfermline ARC serves as the Regimental Headquarters for 154 (Scottish) Regiment Royal Logistic Corps (RLC); and is home to 239 (Fife) Transport Squadron and the Dunfermline Detachment of The Black Watch Battalion Army Cadet Force.
The new building will provide first-class facilities, allowing all the units housed there a chance to grow, and will impact positively on training, recruitment and retention.
Find out more about 154 (Scottish) Regiment RLC.