Police Scotland make £28.5m from property sales

Google Strathclyde Police headquarters at Pitt Street in GlasgowGoogle
The site of the former Strathclyde Police headquarters in Glasgow's Pitt Street is being redeveloped for flats

Old police stations are among nearly 100 property sales which have made Police Scotland more than £28m since 2013, figures show.

The most lucrative was the former Strathclyde Police Headquarters in Glasgow which raised £9.6m in 2018.

The site was bought by private developers who are building a multi-million pound housing scheme of 400 flats for rent called Holland Park.

The former police training school in Edinburgh fetched £3.3m in 2017.

It is now the base for the University of Edinburgh's architecture students, following an extensive refurbishment.

MODA Artist's impression of Pitt Street developmentMODA
An artist's impression of the development at Pitt Street in Glasgow

Other transactions include the former city centre police station in Edinburgh's High Street for £2.35m in 2019 and the ex-Livingston police station, sold for £1.3m in the same year.

Overall, 96 property sales were completed between 2013 and 2020 for a total of £28.5m, according to figures released by Police Scotland to the PA news agency under a freedom of information request.

The cheapest was the sale of an old police office in Orleans Place, Menzieshill, Dundee, for just £5,000 in 2016. Local newspaper reports say the office closed in 2000 and was snapped up by Dundee City Council.

A Police Scotland spokesman said: "Scotland's policing estate has been built up over the course of several decades and some buildings are no longer in the right place or operationally fit for purpose.

"Many police station sales were as a result of properties declared surplus by legacy forces, although the sales occurred post-formation of Police Scotland."

Google 7 Chambers Street in EdinburghGoogle
The former training school at Chambers Street in Edinburgh is now part of the University of Edinburgh

Police Scotland, the second largest force in the UK after the Metropolitan Police with 23,000 officers and staff, was formed in April 2013 when eight regional forces were merged. It is split into 13 local policing divisions.

In January's draft Budget, the Scottish government announced a £1.3bn investment in policing, including a £60m increase in its revenue budget, which finance secretary Kate Forbes said would effectively wipe out the force's deficit.

The Police Scotland spokesman said most decisions to sell assets "were taken after lengthy and detailed consultation with our partners and local communities and this process remains the same today".

He added: "In the vast majority of cases, police stations which were closed were moved to new, modern, co-located accommodation within the same towns, or officers were moved to new police stations nearby.

"The demands and risks facing policing have changed significantly over the years and will continue to do so in an ever-changing Scotland and indeed world.

"However, Police Scotland recognises that local police stations remain important to local communities and that they help to promote and enhance local engagement between our police officers and the communities they serve."