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Inverness art axed after tree gets chop


By Andrew Dixon

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Helen Smith of OpenNess beside a tree stump at the site of the children's water feature.
Helen Smith of OpenNess beside a tree stump at the site of the children's water feature.

A TREE has been felled on the Ness Islands to make way for an artwork which is no longer going to be built.

Campaigners against the controversial My Ness curved wall sculpture planned for near the Ness Islands and Bught Park have highlighted how the area was cleared for the children’s water feature element of a series artworks for the riverside.

However, the £40,000 Highland Council scheme – which has already had £12,902 spent on it – is not going ahead.

A council spokesman said: “I believe one tree was taken down to make way for the children’s water feature. The rest were in connection with the cleaning up of the islands. The tree that was removed for the water feature was done at this time as it coincided with other tree removals and general clearing of shrubs and bushes.”

Another element called The Trail which was to cost £25,000 and use stories and heritage to connect the Ness Islands and mouth of the river is also being shelved – despite an investment of £3500.

They are going because additional cash is needed for the £300,000 My Ness centrepiece following a costly redesign after a public outcry over the lack of wheelchair access. It has left the project £32,000 adrift. As a result, local authority bosses say the project now faces an indefinite delay as they try to identify new funding sources.

In August, Inverness councillors voted 15-7 in favour of continuing the project on the basis that not another penny of council cash would be spent on it. Councillors will be presented an update on Thursday.

A spokeswoman for campaigners OpenNess said: “We can only hope that councillors will call a halt to this disastrous project because OpenNess thinks that the £32,000 shortfall – bad enough as that is – will prove to be even higher if the work continues.”

Councillors have been told by officials that “non-completion of the main project would carry financial and reputational risk”.

The report also indicates another part of the artwork series – a viewing platform called Rest Spaces – which was set for Bank Street needs to go to a different site.

Officers have looked at three potential locations and prefer a spot near the old golf course at Torvean as part of the West Link road project. This element of the project is already £645.89 over its £40,000 budget.


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