CARNEGIE Clinic in Dunfermline is on sale for offers over £275,000 and is being marketed as a 10-bedroom house. 

The category B-listed building on Inglis Street was erected between 1909 and 1912 and was deemed surplus to requirements by NHS Fife recently. 

Ballantynes surveyors and estate agents, who have offices in Edinburgh and Perth, are selling the property on behalf of the health board. 

They have described it as an “outstanding development opportunity” with the possibility of converting the former clinic into flats. 

A potential layout plan is available to interested parties. 
NHS Fife announced in 2013 that the Carnegie and Abbeyview clinics would close with services moving to Queen Margaret Hospital. 

The property, next door to Carnegie Leisure Centre, has three storeys and a basement and was built with money donated by Dunfermline-born philanthropist and multi-millionaire, Andrew Carnegie. 

The internal floor area is more than 29,000 square feet and the clinic also has car parks with spaces for up to 30 vehicles.

The sandstone construction was initially the Scottish College of Hygiene and Physical Training and the Carnegie Dunfermline Trust later made the building available as a health clinic. 

Historic Environment Scotland describe it as “a finely-constructed institutional building incorporating an eclectic mixture of stylistic references including Renaissance, Scottish, Baroque and Jacobean”. 

Ballantynes are also selling Haldane House, at 71 Priory Lane in Dunfermline, on behalf of NHS Fife. 

It has potential for redevelopment and is also described as a 10-bedroom detached house with a large car park. 

The former health centre is close to New Row and Dunfermline Town railway station and on the market for offers over £110,000.