€¦  · web viewaberdeen airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers...

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Delegates Pack Contents. Page 2. Introduction Aberdeen & RACH Page 3. Travel Arrangements Flights. Page 4. Travel Arrangements Car, Sea, Rail. Page 5. Maps Foresterhill Hospital Site. Page 6. Maps Surrounding area. Page 7. Accommodation The Atholl Hotel. 75/night approx) Page 8. Premier Lodge. (£ 46/night approx) The Queens Hotel. (£ 70/night approx) Page 9 & 10. Simpson’s Hotel (£ 95/night approx)

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Page 1: €¦  · Web viewAberdeen Airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers easy access to the surrounding area. It is served by flights from throughout the UK,

Delegates Pack

Contents.

Page 2. Introduction – Aberdeen & RACH

Page 3. Travel Arrangements – Flights.

Page 4. Travel Arrangements – Car, Sea, Rail.

Page 5. Maps – Foresterhill Hospital Site.

Page 6. Maps – Surrounding area.

Page 7. Accommodation – The Atholl Hotel. (£ 75/night approx)

Page 8. Premier Lodge. (£ 46/night approx)The Queens Hotel. (£ 70/night approx)

Page 9 & 10. Simpson’s Hotel (£ 95/night approx)

Page 11-13. Spare Time - Things to see & do in Aberdeen.

Page 13. Contacts - Useful Phone numbers.

Page 14. Registration form.

Page 2: €¦  · Web viewAberdeen Airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers easy access to the surrounding area. It is served by flights from throughout the UK,

There will be a social dinner at Simpson’s hotel on Thursday evening, 8pm. – details on registration form.

The Granite City, The Flower of Scotland, The Silver City by the Golden Sands…Aberdeen wears its titles with pride. A prosperous cosmopolitan city, with a historical old town, Aberdeen has one of Scotland’s most striking skylines. Here is a quintessentially northern city, whose granite makes buildings sparkle after rain; whose outlook is across the seas rather than to the Central Belt; and whose speech retains the Scots idiom as part of everyday communication.

The granite buildings such as Marishal College, His Majesty’s Theatre and St. Machar’s Cathedral give the city its distinctive look, whilst historical Old Aberdeen and the fishing village of Footdee, have an incredible air of time gone by.

Some things don’t change. You cannot escape the sea here, not since it was founded as a Royal burgh back in 1124. The influence of the harbour is everywhere (as are the gulls!), and the harvest of the North Sea continues. Where once streamlined clipper ships left the slipways for the China tea trade, now oil executives from all over the world drive to their comfortable homes in the suburbs.

Aberdeen has won the ‘Britain in Bloom’ competition many times and has taken its floral pulling power on to the European stage. The statistics are all there: two million roses, eleven million daffodils, three million crocuses.

You get the picture. Where other cities resort to grass, Aberdeen employs petal-power. One top attraction is the Winter Gardens in the Duthie Park, home to the stunning Rose Mountain. Even in the depths of winter, the aptly-named Winter Gardens provide colour and scent. At two acres (one hectare), it provides what some say is the largest area under glass in Europe.

The City of Aberdeen with a proud and fascinating history presents a modern cosmopolitan image to visitors. A thriving cultural calendar, lively theatre, and vibrant nightlife, along with excellent restaurants and attractions makes Aberdeen an energising city break choice.

The new Royal Aberdeen Children’s hospital was opened on 26th Jan 2004. Costing in excess of £23 million, It is an entirely filmless hospital carrying out in excess of 26,000 radiological examinations a year serving the population of north east Scotland.

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Page 3: €¦  · Web viewAberdeen Airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers easy access to the surrounding area. It is served by flights from throughout the UK,

Aberdeen flightsAberdeen Airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers easy access to the surrounding area. It is served by flights from throughout the UK, including daily flights to and from London, as well as international destinations such as Amsterdam, Dublin, Esbjerg, Paris and Stavanger. Many attractive low cost fares are available from airlines such as British Airways, Ryanair and EasyJet.

Aberdeen Airport T: 01224 722331 W: www.baa.co.ukDomestic FlightsFrom Airline Daily Flights WebsiteBelfast Eastern Airways 1 per day www.easternairways.comBirmingham British Airways 3 per day www.british-airways.comEast Midlands Eastern Airways 3 per day www.easternairways.comGlasgow British Airways 1 per day www.british-airways.comHumberside Eastern Airways 5 per day www.british-airways.comKirkwall British Airways 2 per day www.british-airways.comLeeds/Bradford Eastern Airways 2 per day www.easternairways.comLondon Gatwick British Airways 4 per day www.british-airways.comLondon Heathrow British Airways 8 per day www.british-airways.comLondon Luton Easy Jet 2 per day www.easyjet.comManchester British Airways & Bmi

British Midland 8 per day www.flybmi.com

Newcastle Eastern Airways / British Midlands 3 per day www.flybmi.com

Norwich Eastern Airways 4 per day www.easternairways.comShetland British Airways 2 per day www.british-airways.comTeeside Eastern Airways 3 per day www.easternairways.comWick Eastern Airways 2 per day www.easternairways.comSouthhampton Eastern Airways 4 per day www.easternairways.com

Direct International Air Services Amsterdam KLM UK 4 per day (3 Sat) www.klm.com

Bergen Coast Air & Wideroe 1-2 per day www.wideroe.nowww.coastair.no

Dublin Ryan Air 1 per day  www.ryanair.comEsbjerg Bmi British Midland 1 per day  www.flybmi.comFaroe Islands Atlantic Airways 2 per week (seasonal) www.atlantic.foParis Air France 3 per day (2 on Sun)  www.airfrance.comStavanger Wideroe& Braathens 7 per day(4 Sat & Sun)  www.wideroe.no

www.braathens.no       International Connections: Brussels, Chicago, Copenhagen, Dusseldorf, Frankfurt, Milan, Geneva, New York (Newark), Oslo, Paris, Stockholm, Trondheim, Vienna.

Visit www.baa.co.uk for further details and information on these flights to Aberdeen, Scotland

By CarAberdeen is accessible by road from Edinburgh or Glasgow in around 2 1/2 hours. Follow the M9 north to Perth and then the A90 trunk road to Aberdeen.

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Page 4: €¦  · Web viewAberdeen Airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers easy access to the surrounding area. It is served by flights from throughout the UK,

Alternatively if you wish to take in some more of the area's scenery on your journey follow either the A92 north from Dundee or the A93 from Perth.

The A92 allows you to wander your way up the picturesque coast running through several towns and villages which all have their own unique character and history.

Following the challenging A93 from Perth will take you over the Cairnwell, which at just over 2200ft or 670m is the highest public road in the UK, and then sweep down into Royal Deeside and Braemar.

www.theaa.com (route planner)www.rac.co.uk (route planner)

By SeaSince its launch in May 2002 the direct year round ferry from Zeebrugge, Belgium to Rosyth, Scotland has proved extremely popular. Leave the continent in the evening, and wake up in Scotland the next day refreshed and ready to explore.

From Rosyth, Aberdeen and Grampian Highlands is a short drive of just 2 hours following motorway to Perth and then the A90 trunk route onwards to Aberdeen.

Aberdeen is the gateway to Orkney and Shetland with regular ferries to both. Use air connections or the North Isles sea route for summer services to Norway and the Faroes.

www.northlinkferries.co.ukwww.superfast.comwww.smyril-line.nowww.fjordline.co.ukwww.dfdsseaways.co.uk

By RailTravelling to Aberdeen and Grampian Highlands by train is another attractive alternative. Take the option of using the overnight sleeper service from London so you awake refreshed in Aberdeen, or travel on one of the hourly trains from Glasgow and Edinburgh or the direct services from Birmingham and Plymouth.

There are also 10 trains daily that travel north to Inverness stopping off at towns such as Huntly, Keith and Elgin.

www.scotrail.co.ukwww.nationalrail.co.uk (route planner)

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Page 5: €¦  · Web viewAberdeen Airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers easy access to the surrounding area. It is served by flights from throughout the UK,

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Page 6: €¦  · Web viewAberdeen Airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers easy access to the surrounding area. It is served by flights from throughout the UK,

1. Premier Lodge.

2. The Atholl Hotel.

3. Simpson's restaurant and hotel. ( Location of dinner on Thursday evening @ 8pm)

4. The Queen’s hotel.

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Page 7: €¦  · Web viewAberdeen Airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers easy access to the surrounding area. It is served by flights from throughout the UK,

Welcome to the Atholl Hotel, a privately owned four star hotel in Aberdeen's West End, just minutes from the City Centre.

No. (2 on Map)

The Atholl Hotel offers:Excellent locationPopular restaurant serving fresh local produce

Excellent private function facillities

Lounge bar with superb selection of malt whiskies, ales and wines Offers including weekend breaks

 

 

 

With a solid, proven reputation earned in its many years as a busy hotel, the Atholl is held in great affection by the people of Aberdeen.We are renowned as the place to come for consistent and friendly service, value for money and a good old-fashioned approach that nothing is ever too much trouble - making it truly "in a class of its own"

54 King's Gate, Aberdeen, Scotland, UK AB15 4YN

  Tel: +44 (0)1224 323505   Fax: +44 (0)1224 321555   e-mail: [email protected]

Premier Lodge. No. (1 on Map)ABERDEEN WEST

North Anderson DriveAberdeenAberdeenshireAB15 6DW

T: 0870 990 6430F: 0870 990

£46per roomper night

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6431

60rooms

Directions:From the North, follow the A96 to connect with the A90 and A92. The Premier Lodge is situated between the Shell petrol station and the Fire station on the right hand side.

From the South, follow the M90 to Perth, then the A90 and A92 to Aberdeen. Stay on the A90 following signs for Aberdeen airport. Take the 1st left after the Fire station at the traffic lights and the Premier Lodge is on the left hand side.

The Premier Lodge is next to The Cocket Hat Homespread restaurant and pub.

No. (4 on Map)

The Queens Hotel

51-53 Queens RoadABERDEEN

AB15 4YP Tel: 01224 209999Fax: 01224 209009

This family run hotel ensures you every small comfort when away from home.

Whether it's business or pleasure that brings you to Aberdeen, the Queens Hotel is the ideal choice where a warm & friendly welcome always awaits you.

Only a short drive from "Royal Deeside" and the "Castle & Whisky" trails. The Queens Hotel makes an ideal touring centre.

Assistance with car rental and other arrangements can be easily made through us.

No. (3 on Map) Location of dinner event on Thursday evening 8pm.

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Page 9: €¦  · Web viewAberdeen Airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers easy access to the surrounding area. It is served by flights from throughout the UK,

Simpson’s Restaurant & Hotel

Simpson's is a family hotel,

situated in the West End of Aberdeen,

Europe's Oil Capital.

The intimate foyer with its

Italian terracotta floor, and

striking furnishings bears

all the hallmarks

of quality and style

the public have come

to expect from an

establishment owned

and run by the Simpson family

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Page 10: €¦  · Web viewAberdeen Airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers easy access to the surrounding area. It is served by flights from throughout the UK,

All of the rooms and suites

of this spectacular hotel have been painstakingly

  designed and decorated with the warm

      welcoming colours of the Riviera.

Complimentary tea and coffee, mineral

water, newspaper, trouser press, CD micro system,

television, iron and hairdryer are all included.

You have the choice of twin

or king-sized beds, and

many of the rooms link to

form larger suites - ideal for

long stay or relocation.

The luxurious en-suite

bathrooms all have high pressure showers.

The Hotel offers a 24 hour porterage service.

The beautiful spacious Dunbar

and Belvidere four-poster suites

reflect the history of the Hotel

and are quaranteed to delight

every bride and groom.

59 Queen's RoadAberdeen, AB15 4YP

Scotland, UK

tel + 44 (0) 1224 327777fax + 44 (0) 1224 327700

e-mail: [email protected]

Mention the RCR PACS SIG meeting to get reduced room rate of £ 95.

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Page 11: €¦  · Web viewAberdeen Airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers easy access to the surrounding area. It is served by flights from throughout the UK,

Here you will find a few suggestions of some of the things to do or see in or around The Granite City.

Old AberdeenNo visit to Aberdeen can prepare you for the delights of the area known as Old Aberdeen. Here is preserved the ancient dwellings and town plan of what was once a separate burgh. Don't miss King's College,the centre of Aberdeen University, an imposing four-square building erected around the famous Quadrangle. King's College Chapel, used for daily worship for five centuries, houses a collection of 15th century wood and ornamentation.

King's College Visitor Centre is a must for its multimedia display, shop and excellent coffee shop. Enjoy a walk along the fine, old cobbled High Street. A word of advice: don't bring your car. This area is compact enough to walk around and anyway, parking is nearly impossible. Almost all the places of visitor interest –Art Gallery, Marischal College, Maritime Museum, shopping malls, Provost Skene's House, harbour and Union Street - are within easy walking distance of each other.

FLOWER POWERThe all-year-round warmth of the Winter Gardens in Duthie Gardens exists under two acres (one hectare) of glass, said to be the largest covered display in Europe. The Cruickshank Botanic Garden in Old Aberdeen, run by Aberdeen University, is another horticultural treasure while Seaton Park by the Don contains a magnificent formal garden (best seen from the slopes below St Machar’s Cathedral). Hazlehead contains the Queen Mother Rose Garden, one of the largest collection of variegated species anywhere.

FITTIEFittie (it appears as Footdee on the front of buses) is a charmingly-preserved fishing village at the mouth of the Dee. It ’s ended up the way it is entirely accidentally, and represents a microcosm of fishing life in times gone by. There are navigation lamps used to light doorways, ships in bottles in windows, and colourful sheds lining the middle of both village squares. Next to the beach are the poles from which nets were hung out to dry. Take a turn round Fittie, then walk 100m to the mouth of the river to watch the ships go by.

TORRY BATTERYGirdleness Lighthouse guards the southern approach to the river Dee beyond the old fishing suburb of Torry. Up on the hill from it is Torry Battery, ancient defence site last used as a gunnery emplacement in World War II. It ’s well worth taking an hour out of a busy day to come here to see the view. Aberdeen explains itself to the eye – how the hills of old guarded Aberdeen and nurtured the basin of what has become an international harbour. Beyond are the spires of the modern city, with the ancient spires

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Page 12: €¦  · Web viewAberdeen Airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers easy access to the surrounding area. It is served by flights from throughout the UK,

of Old Aberdeen in the distance.

COSMOPOLITAN CITYAberdeen is a prosperous city but wears its wealth conservatively. The range of places to eat and drink provides an immediate guide. Sample cuisine that is native North Sea or eastern and exotic. Sample cultural life in the restored Edwardian grandeur of His Majesty’s Theatre or catch the latest sounds in the lively and informal Lemon Tree. Some of the pubs entertain a flourishing following for folk music, while three national orchestras perform regularly in the Music Hall.

A TRINITY OF CATHEDRALSAberdeen is blessed by three cathedrals, separately serving the Christian faith but united in the excellence of their interiors. The outstanding feature of St Machar’s Cathedral (Presbyterian) in Old Aberdeen is the heraldic ceiling of 1520, fine not just by standards in Scotland but comparable to any in Europe. St Andrew’s Episcopal Cathedral in King Street also has some fine ceiling heraldry, but also boasts connections with the United States that are so strong that the youthful John F Kennedy was brought here to see for himself. St Mary's Roman Catholic Cathedral in Huntly Street is developing a growing heraldic display, one with great promise for the future.

The Floral City, the Silver City by the Golden Sands, City of Bon-Accord Aberdeen is enduringly The Granite City. Whatever, it wears its titles with pride, a prosperous cosmopolitan city with an international well-travelled population, and a business culture firmly based on education and IT. Yet this is a historical old place, combining a 21st century outlook with an enchanting city skyline.

The sternly granite edifices of His Majesty's Theatre and the Town House vie with the iced-wedding-cake appeal of Marischal College (the largest white granite building in the world), while historic Old Aberdeen and the fishing village of Fittie mark an indelible air of time gone by. Or time in the present. Here is a thriving cultural calendar married to excellent restaurants and concerts that make Aberdeen an energising city break. Yet native Aberdonians are a modest lot. "Nae bad" they might mutter, if things are going outstandingly well. Here's one place where you don't grow with a swollen head.

Nor will they tell you of the compliments and honours showered on their city. "To walk up the cobbled High Street and College Bounds (in Old Aberdeen) is to go back in time" reported In Britain Magazine.

Nor will many tell you that this is the city that won the Britain in Bloom competition so many times that the judges banned it from re-entering! Undismayed, Aberdeen quietly took its floral pulling power on to the European stage, as astonished continental rivals found to their cost. Who would have guessed that amid the hard granite, Aberdeen soil would prove so fruitful for flowers? That some quirk in the earth nurtures generations of rose nurserymen and women? Little wonder that BBC's award-winning gardening programme Beechgrove Garden is headquartered here. Here in these northern latitudes, it's a long season from the first snowdrop to the last leaf. Yet even in the depths of winter, the aptly-named Winter Gardens provide colour and scent. At two acres (one hectare), it provides what some say is the largest area under glass in Europe.

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Page 13: €¦  · Web viewAberdeen Airport is situated 7 miles north west of the city centre and offers easy access to the surrounding area. It is served by flights from throughout the UK,

Magnificent castles and gardens, highland adventure, dramatic coastline, a land of pride and promise, discover for yourself the best that Scotland has to offer, here in its North-East corner.

What do you want to do? If its something for the kids why not visit Storybook Glen (Aberdeen), Macduff Marine Aquarium, the Stonehaven Open Air Swimming Pool or the Loch Park Adventure Centre (Keith).

Sticking to Aberdeen? The city has a wide variety of attractions to tempt visitors, with venues including the Lemon Tree (said to be Aberdeen’s all year festival fringe), Duthie Park Winter Gardens, Gordon Highlanders Museum, Satrosphere or Codona's Beach Amusement Park (for the kids honest!).

Head out into the Aberdeenshire countryside and delve into Scotland's Castle Country. Why not include the striking Crathes Castle and its neighbour Craigievar Castle – both with magnificent painted ceilings? Take in Castle Fraser with its historic furnishings, paintings and fine embroidery and of course, one of Scotland’s most famous castles, Dunnottar, a dramatic clifftop ruin located south of Stonehaven. Find out more about four great trails.

Whisky lovers will want to head for Moray were some of the World's most famous malts are produced. Glenfiddich, The Glenlivet, Benromach and Glen Grant are just some of the few you can sample! Whilst in the region be sure to visit the splendid Elgin Cathedral, Baxters of Speyside or the Moray Firth Wildlife Centre (Spey Bay).

Discover magnificent castles and gardens, wildlife galore, museums, distilleries, art galleries and championship golf courses...there is a lot to see and do...all we need is your time!

We've given you some suggestions - why not search our wide variety of attractions in Aberdeen & Grampian Highlands please use the visitscotland attraction s database?

Some useful phone numbers,

Aberdeen Airport (01224) 722331 Train Station (01224) 210210 Central Taxis (01224) 898989 RACH X-Ray Dept (01224) 550281James Steel (PACS Manager) - RACH (01224) 550329

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Registration Form

Name.

Job Title.

Organisation.

Contact Tel No.

Contact E-Mail.

Any Dietary Requirements,

Any other requirements,i.e. disabled access

Would you like to attend the dinner event at Simpson’s hotel @ 8pm Thursday 28 th – 3 courses, Coffee & Table wine.£30.

YES NO

If yes please include a cheque for £30 made payable to “Simpson’s Hotel”

Please return this form to James Steel (PACS Manager) at the above address or email to, [email protected]

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