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An Tobar and Mull Theatre: Theatre Development and Early Years Facility
2025-05-23 • No comments • • Regeneration Capital Grant Fund
Who are we?
An Tobar and Mull Theatre (AT&MT) is a vibrant multi-arts centre on the Isle of Mull and the only producing theatre in the Hebrides. As a hub for artistic excellence, cultural expression, and community connection, we play a vital role in our island's creative and social ecology. We aspire to be an island voice holding space for island experience in global culture at a time when the voices of rural communities are drowned out. Through our wide-ranging programme of theatre, visual arts, creative learning, and music, we serve:
- Local and visiting artists, providing space, time, and collaborative opportunities to experiment and grow.
- All school-age children on Mull, providing arts engagement and curriculum enrichment.
- Young people, creating pathways in the creative industries and amplifying youth voice through the arts.
- Older adults, including those living with dementia and other long-term conditions, supporting wellbeing and inclusion.
AT&MT has been recognised as a leader in community-based arts practice by the Federation of Scottish Theatre and as an essential part of local infrastructure by the Mull and Iona Community Trust. The value of our community outreach, arts provision, and advocacy for rural communities is reflected in the thoughtful feedback we continue to receive from our local community:
“Engaging directly with one’s local community and peers is a valuable experience as it provides opportunity to share ideas and experiences and reinforces connectivity across our islands. I feel that this type of outreach work [AT&MT’s community outreach programme] is fundamental to a thriving cultural ecology on Mull and Iona” – Studio Cèilidh participant
“Because of Mull’s geography and lack of public transport many youngsters have difficulty accessing creative activities [...] The work has been taken to them through schools and location theatre. This ensures equality of access.” – Long-term Community Members
What do we want to do and why?
To secure our future and deepen our impact, we are launching an ambitious development project that responds directly to the needs of our island community. At the heart of this project is the purchase of the land beneath Mull Theatre and extension of the building to include dedicated creative workshop spaces for artists and visiting practitioners and an on-site crèche and early years facility to support families and broaden access to the arts.
This project is essential to:
- Protect the future of Mull's only professional theatre and the only producing theatre in the Hebrides. Currently operating under a lease, securing ownership of our site will give us long-term stability and the confidence to plan boldly.
- Address a critical shortage in early years childcare. Mull faces a well-documented lack of affordable and accessible childcare. This project offers a creative, community-centred solution that support parents and caregivers to participate fully in island life and the creative sector.
- Nurture the next generation of artists and islanders. The crèche and workshop spaces will be designed with care, learning, discovery, and cultural enrichment at their heart.
- Grow the island's creative ecology and promote the artistic excellence of Argyll and Bute on a national and international level. New workshop spaces will allow us to host more artists-in-residence and facilitate peer exchange. It will also offer affordable rehearsal and creation space for local and visiting artists, and extend our ability to deliver training, workshops, and events that connect Mull and Argyll and Bute to the wider cultural landscape of Scotland and beyond.
- Strengthen community wellbeing. As we emerge from the social and economic challenges of recent years, this development supports community recovery through creativity, care, and collaboration.
Who are our partners?
We will work in partnership with:
- Local early years creative learning practitioners and educators, ensuring the crèche is child-centred, safe, and rooted in best practice.
- Forestry and Land Scotland, to navigate our land purchase and ensure the building extension is designed with care and attention to our beautiful natural surroundings.
- Mull and Iona Community Trust (MICT), to ensure the facility is bespoke and meets the needs of our island community.
- Our Community Advisory Group, to ensure that local voices and lived experience remains at the heart of the project.
We believe that access to the arts, like access to care, should not depend on geography. This project is about more than bricks and mortar, it's about building a future where creativity, care, and community thrive side-by-side. With the support of our partners and funders, we're excited to take this next step in our journey, ensuring that AT&MT remains a place where island voices are heard, nurtured, and celebrated for generations to come.
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Strachur Community Men's Shed
2025-05-22 • No comments • • Regeneration Capital Grant Fund
Our primary aim is to build a safe social/recreational workshop and creative workspace for retired men & women to undertake creative projects for the village and local district. This should assist in improving the appearance of Strachur and surrounding area for the benefit of the local community and visitors e.g. by reconstituting picnic areas that have fallen into disrepair, also by maintaining benches; fences etc. such as those in our community Heron Park and installing sculpture/art works where agreed as appropriate. Similar maintenance and creative projects would be made available to the district with the involvement of people domiciled within a 10 mile radius. Existing craft and trade skills that 'Shed' members possess would be used to do this, hopefully enabling members to learn new skills as well. Other local organizations would also benefit e.g. the local Youth/Drama Group where members could assist in the manufacture of costumes and scenery for the regular annual productions at reduced cost.
Like many small rural villages Strachur has an increasing population of retirees. We hope that involvement in local projects - through teamwork - would help in reducing feelings of isolation for the 'older' members of our community by providing mental and physical stimulation, thus showing the 'younger' members of our community that we still have something to contribute to village life whilst improving recreational facilities for all. This approach should enable the facility to be sustained for many years as people become aware of the projects we are involved in. The provision of workshop facilities should also benefit the village Memorial Hall by providing support for maintenance and supplementing the facilities available in the centre of the village. To this end we want to work with the local Development Corporation; the Village Hall Committee and the Organisations that use the limited facilities available at present.

Renewing the fabric of Atlantis Leisure for the next Generation
2025-06-02 • No comments • • Regeneration Capital Grant Fund
Atlantis Leisure is a vibrant, community-run health and wellbeing hub in the heart of Oban. For over 30 years, we’ve been a lifeline for locals of all ages - a place where toddlers learn to swim, teens train with sports clubs, adults improve their fitness and older residents stay active and connected. As a registered charity and social enterprise, every penny we earn is reinvested. Our huge range of facilities are designed to support active, healthy lives. We work with schools, NHS partners, and community groups to deliver inclusive, high-impact services. With over 150,000 visits a year and no other facility like it for 95 miles, Atlantis isn’t just a leisure centre - it’s the beating heart of our community.
This application comprises separate projects that are also listed on Aspiring Places indivdiually but we thought it made sense to group them together as a single proposal for the purposes of RCGF too:
1. What do you want to do? We propose a multi-strand capital regeneration programme at Atlantis Leisure — a vital, community-owned asset serving Oban and surrounding remote rural areas — to deliver large-scale, community-led change aligned with RCGF's aims that breathes new life into an over 50 year old facility.
This project brings together three deliverable, community-prioritised infrastructure improvements:
- Installation of rooftop solar panels and battery storage: significanty reducing carbon emissions, lowering long-term operating costs and contributing to Net Zero targets. 160k
- Expansion of Atlantis’ gym: a two-storey extension to accommodate growing community demand, support inclusive programmes like Elevate & Stay Active, and provide flexible meeting and office space to host outreach services and community partners. 175k
- Creation of accessible changing facility: reconfiguring existing internal space, to provide a dignified, fully inclusive changing area to support disabled users 50k
- Restoration of end of life outdoor sports pitch: bringing an end-of-life, unusable asset back into service, enabling schools, clubs, and informal groups to use it year-round, relieving pressure from indoor space and boosting physical activity levels. 90k
- Restoration of Sports Hall Roof: rectifying end-of-life aspects of the roofing. 150,000k
2. Why is your project needed? Atlantis Leisure is a community-run registered charity and social enterprise that delivers year-round access to sport, physical activity, and wellbeing services. We are the only such facility within a 95-mile radius and serve over 150,000 users annually — yet key parts of our infrastructure are now limiting access, affordability, and impact.
- The pitch is end-of-life and unusable, with back-up facilities constrained by a statutory noise order.
- We've run out of room in our existing gym facility meaning vital communtiy programmes like Healthy Options are unable to operate properly
- There is no suitable changing space for users with complex access needs, meaning many are excluded from participation.
- Energy costs are surging, making it harder to deliver affordable access and sustain services for low-income families.
The project will regenerate these essential community assets, futureproof our building, reduce inequalities in access, and enable Atlantis to deliver sustainable social value for decades to come — directly supporting the RCGF’s priorities around deprivation, climate, inclusion, and place-based transformation.
3. What positive changes will your project bring about?
- Inclusive Infrastructure: The accessible changing space addresses long-standing inequality, empowering disabled users to participate fully & independently.
- Net-Zero Progress: Solar & battery systems will directly reduce carbon emissions, support national climate goals, & make Atlantis more financially sustainable.
- Renewed Community Space: The front pitch transformation will reinstate valuable outdoor capacity, expanding options for schools, clubs, and families.
- Address Capacity Issues: Expanding the gym answers a growing problem with existing capacity.
- Child Poverty Impact: Reducing running costs helps us to maintain subsidised programmes, removing financial barriers to physical & social wellbeing.
- Place-Based Renewal: This project aligns with the Place Principle and National Strategy for Economic Transformation by investing in a community-anchored asset with cross-cutting impact.
Together, these outcomes represent transformational, community-led regeneration that will enhance the resilience, health, and wellbeing of Oban.
4. How long will your project run for?
The project is fully deliverable within FY 2026–27.
- Start: Early 2026
- End: March 2027
- Drawdown Ready: All spend will be committed or completed within the terms of the RCGF.
- Delivery Approach: Projects will be managed by Atlantis Leisure’s Facilities Subgroup with oversight from the Board.
- Match Funding: Confirmed: Atlantis own contribution. Pending: we are actively pursuing applications and conversations with other funders including LES's CARES programme

Nonhebel Park (Final Phase)- Community Regeneration in Action
2025-05-30 • No comments • • Regeneration Capital Grant Fund
The Project: We want to develop the final piece of community owned land available at Nonhebel Light Industrial Park, Tobermory to build up to two additional business units. The new units will be for rent to businesses which are on a waiting list for space at the site. Project Background & Need: In response to community identified need for small business premises, community led rengeration charity, Mull and Iona Community Trust developed and now manages 38 business units plus fenced compounds, supporting 24 local businesses and an estimated 61 jobs. There is a waiting list for the units still, proving market failure and the need to develop the final piece of land on the site to further support local businesses and economic regeneration in North Mull. Project Outcomes: Positive Changes: New business units supporting a minimum 2 businesses and up to another 8 local jobs. Improving access to services, tackling rural poverty and population decline by supporting business expansion, start-up and employment; improving family incomes and making the island a more vibrant and sustainable place to live and work. Project Timescales: Subject to securing funding, work to start in late 2025 and complete in Spring 2026. Highland and Island Enterprise are a project partner with a funding offer in the region of £200k.

Save Tobermory Fisherman’s Pier
2025-06-02 • No comments • • Regeneration Capital Grant Fund
1 What do we want to do?
Tobermory Fisherman's Pier Association intends to renovate and improve Thomas Telford's hisoric pier for the use of fishermen and other commercial users. We would like to preserve the pier as a place that can be used and enjoyed by locals and visitors alike. We want to open the pier to other commercial users and provide a solution to the risk of flooding caused by increasingly higher tides. A structural engineers report has been commissioned and has provided a plan for remedial works.
2 Why is the project needed?
While the pier is a vital economic resource for the fishermen of North Mull, it is also an essential and integral part of Tobermory's built heritage. Without the pier the fishermen would need to look for alternative space to store and repair gear. They would have to use moorings or pontoons and they would have to use alternative means to land their catch. All of these alternatives are costly, inconvenient and not as safe as the platform provided by the pier.
We have the support of the community and are backed by Mull Community Council, Tobermory Harbour Association and Mull and Iona Community Trust.
3 What positive changes will our project bring about?
The proposed improvements to the pier will provide a fit for purpose structure that will enable the fishing community, and other commercial users, to have confidence in the long-term viability of their businesses and provide the oppurtunity to support new entrants to the sector. Securing the long-term future of the pier will enable it to remain at the heart of the community for centuries to come, bringing economic benefit to the town as a platform for the fishermen and also as part of what draws visitors to Tobermory. It will continue to be a much loved hub for community celebrations and a valued civic space for locals and visitors to enjoy.
4 How long will our project run for?
The project will start in March 2026 and run for seven months.
Please refer to the attached PDF file for our more comprehensive proposal.