The legal requirement to have an asbestos survey carried out applies to non-domestic properties. If you own or operate a non-domestic property such as an office, shop, or warehouse, an asbestos survey and management plan must be in place. For domestic properties, there is no legal requirement to have an asbestos survey.
Thurso
Thurso is a community as well as former burgh on the north coast of the Highland council location of Scotland. Located in the historic area of Caithness, it is the northernmost town on the British landmass. It exists at the junction of the north-south A9 road and also the west-east A836 road, attached to Bridge of Forss in the west and also Castletown in the east. The 34-mile (55 kilometres) River Thurso moves with the community as well as into Thurso Bay as well as the Pentland Firth. The river tidewater serves as a tiny harbour. At the 2011 Census, Thurso had a population of 7,933. The bigger Thurso civil parish consisting of the town as well as the bordering countryside had a population of 9,112. Thurso worked as a crucial Norse port, and later on traded with ports throughout northern Europe till the 19th century. A flourishing fishing centre, Thurso also had a track record for its linen-cloth as well as tanning activities. As of 2015 the Dounreay Nuclear Research Establishment, although mainly deactivated at the end of the 20th century, employs a substantial variety of the local population. The Category-A noted wrecked Old St Peter's Church (St. Peter's Kirk) is just one of the earliest churches in Scotland, dating to at least 1125. The existing church, St Andrew's and St Peter's, was integrated in 1832 to a layout by William Burn in the Gothic design. The community consists of the main school of North Highland College and Thurso High School, the northernmost high school on the British mainland, which was established in 1958. Thurso Castle, built in 1872, remains in ruins. Thurso is home to the football (football) team, Thurso FC, developed in 1998, which play in the North Caledonian League, and the rugby groups Caithness Crushers as well as Caithness RFC. Thurso railway station, opened in 1874, was one of the most northern station on the Sutherland and also Caithness Railway. The close-by port of Scrabster gives ferry solutions to the Orkney Islands; the Northlink ferryboat (MV Hamnavoe) operates in between Scrabster and Stromness.