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28 Dec 2019

Funding secured for Corrieshalloch Gorge gateway

A view of Corrieshalloch Gorge on a sunny day, showing the waterfall tumbling down the steep-sided gorge.
Gorge plans get £900k funding from Natural and Cultural Heritage Fund.

Our plans for a world-class visitor facility at the stunning Corrieshalloch Gorge National Nature Reserve in Wester Ross can progress, thanks to £923,277 funding from the Natural and Cultural Heritage Fund.

The £2.3 million project will enable our charity, which protects Scotland’s national and natural treasures, to build a new visitor centre, including toilet facilities and a blue loo for camper vans, improve parking at the beauty spot and expand the path network with improved wayfinding and interpretation.

The remaining funding for the project comes from our restricted reserves.

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“Thanks to this fantastic funding, our charity can continue to invest in the Wester Ross area.”
Clea Warner, General Manager for the North West

Clea said: ‘These new facilities will be the gateway to the rich natural heritage of the Gorge and the Falls of Measach, one of the most spectacular waterfalls in the UK, and will make a major contribution to the local area, vastly improving the welcome we can offer the increasing number of visitors who are heading north.’

With its beautiful location and impressive scenery, Corrieshalloch Gorge has seen a 60% increase in visitor numbers since 2012, with almost 140,000 visitors in 2017/18.

Clea continues: ‘As a National Nature Reserve, Corrieshalloch Gorge requires intensive protection. These new facilities will help us to accommodate the growing number of visitors, while ensuring the site gets the important conservation care that a place of such importance needs.’

Francesca Osowska, Chief Executive for Scottish Natural Heritage, added: ‘A key priority for SNH is to help ensure tourism and other sectors benefit from, and invest in, Scotland’s high-quality environment.

‘Nature and culture are closely linked in the Highlands & Islands, and in many places they are central to the local economy, maintaining rural populations, jobs and skills. This project will bring significant benefits to the local area for years to come, and give visitors even more to enjoy in these iconic areas of Scotland.’

The Corrieshalloch Gorge Gateway to Nature project is part of a new £5 million Scottish programme of projects to invest in the Highlands & Islands to provide more and better quality opportunities for visitors to enjoy natural and cultural heritage assets. The Natural and Cultural Heritage Fund is led by Scottish Natural Heritage and is part funded through the European Development Fund.

The Natural and Cultural Heritage Fund will encourage people to visit some of the more remote and rural areas and create and sustain jobs, businesses and services in local communities. The purpose of the fund is to promote and develop the outstanding natural and cultural heritage of the Highlands & Islands in a way that conserves and protects them.