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Dounreay to become UK's first nuclear heritage project

24th November 2009

Within a few years, much of the experimental nuclear site at Dounreay will disappear from the landscape.

Many of the facilities that have dominated the skyline of Scotland's north coast for the past 50 years will be razed to the ground.

As the demolition of the entire site gets nearer, members of the public will be invited in the near future to take part in a debate about which aspects of Britain's abandoned experiment with fast reactors should be preserved for posterity when everything else has gone.

The three-month debate early in the new year aims to identify opportunities and discuss the options. It is expected to result in a heritage strategy that will leave in place a legacy for future generations to interpret Dounreay's significance in the industrial history of the last century.

It's the first time in the UK that a heritage strategy has been developed for an entire nuclear site.

"The impetus stems from the consultation we carried out two years ago about the 'end state' for decommissioning. This focused minds on the condition we leave the place in when all the redundant facilities have been cleared away," explained Doug Graham, environment team leader at Dounreay Site Restoration Ltd.

"One of the recommendations was 'an open and transparent decision on the future of the fast reactor sphere'. Discussions with Historic Scotland around the same time lead us to believe we needed a heritage strategy for the site as a whole. The heritage of the site is a lot broader and deeper than simply one building and it's important we debate and explore all aspects as part of this exercise."

All the redundant buildings at Dounreay are due to be demolished by 2025, with more than 100 structures flattened already.

The only buildings needed after 2025 will be those required to look after an estimated 15,000m3 of intermediate-level radioactive waste from decommissioning and to exclude the public from tracts of land where radioactive contamination will be left undisturbed.

DSRL hired Atkins Heritage to prepare a draft strategy that identifies those aspects of the present site that are feasible to preserve, celebrate or commemorate.

"Most buildings will be beyond economic repair, given their age and a legacy of radioactive contamination," said James Gunn, the site's heritage officer.

"But there are some aspects of the work that went on inside them that can be preserved. It's important we explore what people want to see kept and the draft strategy builds on some of the ideas that have come forward already, such as relocating the fast reactor control room to a museum, 3D computer models and capturing the memories of retired workers of the early pioneering days. It's important, too, that the exercise considers cost issues, who will look after saved items in the future and how."

A consultative document will be published and the public given three months to make their views known. The feedback will help to shape recommendations to the site's owners, the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority, next summer.