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Admission
Facilities
- Accessible by public transport (5)
- Bicycle rack (1)
- Car parking (3)
- Children's quiz available (5)
- Disabled toilets (1)
- Display on history (4)
- Dogs not permitted (2)
- May close for lunch in winter, please call in advance (1)
- May close for lunch, please call in advance (1)
- Picnic area (2)
- Restaurant/café (1)
- Self service tea/coffee (1)
- Shop (5)
- Strong footwear recommended (6)
- Toilets (3)
- Visitor centre (4)
- Water bottle refill (1)
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Search results
The search has returned 13 places
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Aberdour Castle and Gardens
Admire views of the Forth from what’s possibly Scotland’s oldest standing castle.
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Blackfriars Chapel, St Andrews
Encounter a tranquil ruin amid the bustle of a busy street in this rare remnant of St Andrews' monastic past.
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Culross Abbey
Admire the beautiful surrounds of this ruined 1200s Cistercian monastery.
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Dogton Stone
Admire this rare free-standing Pictish cross, still in its original location.
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Dunfermline Abbey and Palace
Walk among kings in Dunfermline Abbey, a royal mausoleum, and see the palace where the last monarch born in Scotland was delivered.
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Inchcolm Abbey
Set sail for a very special island in the Firth of Forth – home to Scotland’s best-preserved group of monastic buildings.
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Ravenscraig Castle
Admire the towering defensive façade of a heavily fortified castle, originally built as a royal residence.
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Scotstarvit Tower
Puzzle over the eccentricities of this gentry tower house with a difference.
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St Andrews Castle
Uncover both sides of a castle with a 450-year history – its role as a bishop’s palace, and as a fortress and state prison.
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St Andrews Cathedral
Explore the remains of Scotland’s largest and most magnificent medieval church, still a major landmark even as a ruin.
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St Bridget's Kirk
Wander the ruins of a medieval church that remained a house of worship for 700 years.
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St Mary's Church, Kirkheugh, St Andrews
Explore the cliffside site of the earliest collegiate church in Scotland.