Gallery

Example Roof Survey/Check

Roof surveys and checks can be carried out with ease, taking shots of all areas of your roof. Any issues that are spotted, can be investigated further and closer but always at a safe distance.

Example Roof survey/checks

During your roof survey and check as well as video footage of the flight, images will be taken of each area of your roof. Any areas requiring investgation further can be inspected closer and images taken at this point also.

Falkirk Crematorium

Falkirk Crematorium, situated in Camelon, Falkirk in beautiful surroundings and gardens.

Falkirk Crematorium

The Falkirk Stadium

Home of Falkirk F.C the stadium was built in 2004 and now consists of 3 stands. It has a capacity of 7937 and has been home to many concerts such as Elton John, Little Mix, The Killers, Status Quo and Tom Jones.

Falkirk Stadium

The Suite 

The Suite is a business centre in Larbert Scotland, home to many independant businesses hosted by successful women.

Spitfire Memorial 

Grangemouth, Scotland.

A replica mark 1 Supermarine Spitfire commemorates the pilots and airfield that was home to over 100 Spitfires in Grangemouth in WW2. The Spitfire was unveiled in May 2013.

Grangemouth Spitfire Memorial

The Kelpies

Standing at 100ft tall and weighing omre than 300 tonnes each, The Kelpies located in the Helix park between Grangemouth and Falkirk were created by sculptor and artist Andy Scott. The attraction was completed October 2013 and the sculptures were unveiled in November 201. They have been visited by around 1 million visitors each year.

The Kelpies

Grangemouth Town Centre Demolition works 3.9.24

Callendar House, Falkirk

Callendar House is a mansion set within the grounds of Callendar Park in Falkirk, central Scotland. During the 19th century, it was redesigned and extended in the style of a French Renaissance chateau fused with elements of Scottish baronial architecture. However, the core of the building is a 14th-century tower house.

Callendar House

Blackness Castle "The ship that never sailed"

Blackness Castle stands by the Firth of Forth, at the port that served the royal burgh of Linlithgow in medieval times. Though built in the 15th century as a lordly residence for the Crichtons, one of Scotland’s more powerful families, it soon took on other roles.

Blackness went on to become:

  • a royal castle, in 1453
  • a garrison fortress
  • a state prison
  • an ammunition depot, in the later 19th century

The castle was decommissioned after the First World War and passed into state care as a visitor attraction.

The ship that never sailed

Blackness is often called ‘the ship that never sailed’. From the seaward side it looks just like a great stone ship run aground.

Its pointed stem projects into the water, while the square stern stands beached on dry land.

The castle’s three towers add to the effect:

  • the small ‘stem’ tower at the prow
  • its tall, central ‘main mast’ tower
  • the solid ‘stern’ tower at the rear

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