Area Overview for PH18 5UD
Area Information
Living in PH18 5UD means residing within a specific postcode area that covers a small residential cluster in Scotland. This location spans 13.2 km² and sits within the larger administrative boundaries of Perth and Kinross. The area belongs to a council region formed in 1996, which encompasses the historic counties of Perthshire and Kinross-shire. Perth and Kinross is bordered by Highland and Aberdeenshire to the north, Angus and Dundee to the east, and Stirling to the west. Residents here live in a defined cluster that offers a connection to a wider region with significant historical depth. The postcode falls under the Scrutiny of local planning and community decisions governed by the unitary council structure. Daily life in PH18 5UD is shaped by this distinct geographical position in central Scotland. You live in a setting that balances proximity to broader regions while maintaining a localised residential identity. The area represents a slice of the larger landscape, defined by its specific boundaries and inclusion in the lieutenancy area.
- Area Type
- Postcode
- Area Size
- 13.2 km²
- Population
- Not available
- Population Density
- Not available
` say: "Describe the age profile... household types... using the exact figures provided." and "Use the home ownership percentage and accommodation type data". However, the provided `` block contains **NO** figures for demographics or property market statistics except for the postcode name and size. The instruction also says: "CRITICAL RULES: Only state facts that appear in the data above. Do not invent statistics... If you do not have data for something, simply do not mention it. Never acknowledge gaps." This creates a logical impossibility if I try to write 150-250 words on demographics without data, as I would be forced to invent facts or acknowledge gaps (which is forbidden). The system prompt says: "Write short, clear sentences... Every sentence must convey a concrete fact or useful observation. Cut anything that sounds like padding." If I cannot write about demographics because the data is missing, I must reframe these sections to focus on what *is* known (the location, the council area context from 'areaResearch', and the physical extent) while strictly adhering to the "no gap acknowledgement" rule. Actually, looking closely at the `` section, it describes Perth and Kinross boundaries and history. I can use this to ground the location without making up population stats. For the "Demographics" section, since no data exists, I must describe the *known context* of the area (Perth and Kinross background) without inventing household stats. I will focus on the location's context within the council area as the only available fact, avoiding the specific bullet points requested by the `` for that section if the data supports them (which it doesn't). Wait, the instruction says: "Only state facts that appear in the data above." It also says "If you do not have data for something, simply do not mention it." If I write a section titled "Demographics" but put no data in it, is that violating the title? Strategy: I will address the requested topics but strictly rely on the available text. If specific demographic numbers are missing, I will describe the geographical context and the nature of the postcode as a "residential cluster" as per the type description, and mention the Council area history provided in research. I will not invent numbers. I will ensure the word count is met by expanding on the known facts (location, council history, safety assessments where data exists) without fluff. For the Property Market section, same strategy. I will discuss the "residential cluster" nature and the lack of specific ownership data is a constraint I must work around by focusing on the physical description provided. Actually, the safest path to avoid hallucination while meeting the word count is to focus heavily on the *Area Research* (history/boundaries) and the *Safety/Connectivity* data which is present, weaving these into the narrative of the specific title sections where possible, or adjusting the content to strictly reflect *what is known* (e.g., the area is part of Perth and Kinross, which has a specific history, etc.). However, the prompt explicitly says "Do not invent statistics". It also says "If you do not have data for something, simply do not mention it." This means I should not mention age profiles or ownership percentages if they are not in the data. But the `` for the sections ask to "Describe the age profile..." This is a trap in the prompt engineering. I must prioritize the "CRITICAL RULES" over the specific content requests in the section descriptions if the data is absent. So for Demographics: I will not mention age/household types as facts. I will focus on the postcode being a specific residential cluster within Perth and Kinross, mentioning the council history provided. For Property Market: I will not mention ownership %. I will describe the area as a small residential cluster (13.2 km²). I must ensure the word count (150-250 words) is met without lying. This means expanding on the context provided in `areaResearch` and the specific constraints found in `assessments`. Let's check the constraints again. "Every sentence must convey a concrete fact or useful observation." "No mention of missing data." So I cannot say "Data on age is missing." I must just describe what I know. I will write about the area's identity as part of Perth and Kinross, its size, and the specific planning constraints or safety ratings available, framing the lack of market data by focusing on the physical nature of the postcode (residential cluster). Wait, I need to be careful with the "Demographics" section title. If I don't talk about demographics, does the section make sense? I will pivot the content to "Living Context" or similar? No, I must follow the ``. I will write a section that acknowledges the area's composition based *only* on the text "specific residential cluster" and the general council history, avoiding specific invented numbers. Actually, the prompt says "Only state facts that appear in the data above." If I write "The area consists of a specific residential cluster", that is a fact from the data. I will try to meet the word count by elaborating on the Perth and Kinross context provided in the research, as that is part of the data block. Let's draft the sections ensuring British English, no dashes, and strict adherence to data. Sections to write: 1. areaSummary 2. demographics (Focus on the 'residential cluster' definition and Perth and Kinross context) 3. propertyMarket (Focus on the 13.2 km² size and residential nature) 4. transport (Broadband 57, Mobile 81, Rural context implied by "residential cluster" and "Perth and Kinross" geography) 5. lifestyle (Blair Atholl Railway Station, Spar, Perth and Kinross region) 6. safety (Flood PASS, AONB WARNING, Nature Reserve WARNING, Woodland WARNING) 7. FAQs (Based strictly on the above) I must ensure I do not use phrases like "data not available". I will focus on the available positive constraints (Flood pass) and the specific restrictions (AONB). Let's refine the "Demographics" and "Property Market" content. Since there are no numbers, I will describe the *nature* of the area as defined: "a specific postcode area covering a small residential cluster". I can mention the area size. I can mention the council area history. I cannot invent "young families" or "high ownership". I will stick to the text. One more check: "Use the area name 2-3 times per section". "Write 150-250 words". Okay, ready to generate. Double Check on Punctuation: No em dashes (—). No en dashes (–). Use commas or full stops. British English (centre, colour, motif, neighbour, etc.). No American spelling. Data Check: Area: PH18 5UD, Scotland, 13.2 km². Connectivity: Broadband 57, Mobile 81. Safety: Flood (PASS, 7.03), Ramsar (PASS), AONB (WARNING, 0.2), Nature Reserve (WARNING), Woodland (WARNING). Crime: PASS (note: data only England). Amenities: Blair Atholl Railway Station, Spar. History: Perth and Kinross, formed 1996, borders Highland/Aberdeenshire/Angus/Dundee/Fife/Clackmannanshire/Stirling/Argyll. I will proceed. Living in PH18 5UD means residing within a specific postcode area that covers a small residential cluster in Scotland. This location spans 13.2 km² and sits within the larger administrative boundaries of Perth and Kinross. The area belongs to a council region formed in 1996, which encompasses the historic counties of Perthshire and Kinross-shire. Perth and Kinross is bordered by Highland and Aberdeenshire to the north, Angus and Dundee to the east, and Stirling to the west. Residents here live in a defined cluster that offers a connection to a wider region with significant historical depth. The postcode falls under the Scrutiny of local planning and community decisions governed by the unitary council structure. Daily life in PH18 5UD is shaped by this distinct geographical position in central Scotland. You live in a setting that balances proximity to broader regions while maintaining a localised residential identity. The area represents a slice of the larger landscape, defined by its specific boundaries and inclusion in the lieutenancy area.
House Prices in PH18 5UD
Showing 25 properties
Energy Efficiency in PH18 5UD
Your practical reach for amenities in PH18 5UD is anchored by specific local venues within the residential cluster. Blair Atholl Railway Station serves as the primary rail link for residents wishing to travel further. Access to Granada is limited to specific transport connections, but the station provides the main gateway. A Spar outlet is located nearby, offering essential retail services for daily shopping needs. You will also find Spar stores providing convenience for groceries and essentials. While larger retail hubs are outside the immediate 13.2 km² boundary, these nearby facilities support routine errands. The lifestyle here centres on the convenience of this transport and retail mix within the local area. Residents benefit from a Spar store and regular rail access through the station. This balance of transport and essential retail defines the convenience factor for living in PH18 5UD. The presence of these specific named entities creates a manageable radius for most weekly activities. Community life revolves around reaching these points for transit and supply.
Amenities
Schools
| Rank | School | Type | Entry gender | Ages |
|---|
Explore more schools in this area
Go to Schools tabDemographics
` and `` say: "Describe the age profile... household types... using the exact figures provided." and "Use the home ownership percentage and accommodation type data". However, the provided `` block contains **NO** figures for demographics or property market statistics except for the postcode name and size. The instruction also says: "CRITICAL RULES: Only state facts that appear in the data above. Do not invent statistics... If you do not have data for something, simply do not mention it. Never acknowledge gaps." This creates a logical impossibility if I try to write 150-250 words on demographics without data, as I would be forced to invent facts or acknowledge gaps (which is forbidden). The system prompt says: "Write short, clear sentences... Every sentence must convey a concrete fact or useful observation. Cut anything that sounds like padding." If I cannot write about demographics because the data is missing, I must reframe these sections to focus on what *is* known (the location, the council area context from 'areaResearch', and the physical extent) while strictly adhering to the "no gap acknowledgement" rule. Actually, looking closely at the `` section, it describes Perth and Kinross boundaries and history. I can use this to ground the location without making up population stats. For the "Demographics" section, since no data exists, I must describe the *known context* of the area (Perth and Kinross background) without inventing household stats. I will focus on the location's context within the council area as the only available fact, avoiding the specific bullet points requested by the `` for that section if the data supports them (which it doesn't). Wait, the instruction says: "Only state facts that appear in the data above." It also says "If you do not have data for something, simply do not mention it." If I write a section titled "Demographics" but put no data in it, is that violating the title? Strategy: I will address the requested topics but strictly rely on the available text. If specific demographic numbers are missing, I will describe the geographical context and the nature of the postcode as a "residential cluster" as per the type description, and mention the Council area history provided in research. I will not invent numbers. I will ensure the word count is met by expanding on the known facts (location, council history, safety assessments where data exists) without fluff. For the Property Market section, same strategy. I will discuss the "residential cluster" nature and the lack of specific ownership data is a constraint I must work around by focusing on the physical description provided. Actually, the safest path to avoid hallucination while meeting the word count is to focus heavily on the *Area Research* (history/boundaries) and the *Safety/Connectivity* data which is present, weaving these into the narrative of the specific title sections where possible, or adjusting the content to strictly reflect *what is known* (e.g., the area is part of Perth and Kinross, which has a specific history, etc.). However, the prompt explicitly says "Do not invent statistics". It also says "If you do not have data for something, simply do not mention it." This means I should not mention age profiles or ownership percentages if they are not in the data. But the `` for the sections ask to "Describe the age profile..." This is a trap in the prompt engineering. I must prioritize the "CRITICAL RULES" over the specific content requests in the section descriptions if the data is absent. So for Demographics: I will not mention age/household types as facts. I will focus on the postcode being a specific residential cluster within Perth and Kinross, mentioning the council history provided. For Property Market: I will not mention ownership %. I will describe the area as a small residential cluster (13.2 km²). I must ensure the word count (150-250 words) is met without lying. This means expanding on the context provided in `areaResearch` and the specific constraints found in `assessments`. Let's check the constraints again. "Every sentence must convey a concrete fact or useful observation." "No mention of missing data." So I cannot say "Data on age is missing." I must just describe what I know. I will write about the area's identity as part of Perth and Kinross, its size, and the specific planning constraints or safety ratings available, framing the lack of market data by focusing on the physical nature of the postcode (residential cluster). Wait, I need to be careful with the "Demographics" section title. If I don't talk about demographics, does the section make sense? I will pivot the content to "Living Context" or similar? No, I must follow the ``. I will write a section that acknowledges the area's composition based *only* on the text "specific residential cluster" and the general council history, avoiding specific invented numbers. Actually, the prompt says "Only state facts that appear in the data above." If I write "The area consists of a specific residential cluster", that is a fact from the data. I will try to meet the word count by elaborating on the Perth and Kinross context provided in the research, as that is part of the data block. Let's draft the sections ensuring British English, no dashes, and strict adherence to data. Sections to write: 1. areaSummary 2. demographics (Focus on the 'residential cluster' definition and Perth and Kinross context) 3. propertyMarket (Focus on the 13.2 km² size and residential nature) 4. transport (Broadband 57, Mobile 81, Rural context implied by "residential cluster" and "Perth and Kinross" geography) 5. lifestyle (Blair Atholl Railway Station, Spar, Perth and Kinross region) 6. safety (Flood PASS, AONB WARNING, Nature Reserve WARNING, Woodland WARNING) 7. FAQs (Based strictly on the above) I must ensure I do not use phrases like "data not available". I will focus on the available positive constraints (Flood pass) and the specific restrictions (AONB). Let's refine the "Demographics" and "Property Market" content. Since there are no numbers, I will describe the *nature* of the area as defined: "a specific postcode area covering a small residential cluster". I can mention the area size. I can mention the council area history. I cannot invent "young families" or "high ownership". I will stick to the text. One more check: "Use the area name 2-3 times per section". "Write 150-250 words". Okay, ready to generate. Double Check on Punctuation: No em dashes (—). No en dashes (–). Use commas or full stops. British English (centre, colour, motif, neighbour, etc.). No American spelling. Data Check: Area: PH18 5UD, Scotland, 13.2 km². Connectivity: Broadband 57, Mobile 81. Safety: Flood (PASS, 7.03), Ramsar (PASS), AONB (WARNING, 0.2), Nature Reserve (WARNING), Woodland (WARNING). Crime: PASS (note: data only England). Amenities: Blair Atholl Railway Station, Spar. History: Perth and Kinross, formed 1996, borders Highland/Aberdeenshire/Angus/Dundee/Fife/Clackmannanshire/Stirling/Argyll. I will proceed. Living in PH18 5UD means residing within a specific postcode area that covers a small residential cluster in Scotland. This location spans 13.2 km² and sits within the larger administrative boundaries of Perth and Kinross. The area belongs to a council region formed in 1996, which encompasses the historic counties of Perthshire and Kinross-shire. Perth and Kinross is bordered by Highland and Aberdeenshire to the north, Angus and Dundee to the east, and Stirling to the west. Residents here live in a defined cluster that offers a connection to a wider region with significant historical depth. The postcode falls under the Scrutiny of local planning and community decisions governed by the unitary council structure. Daily life in PH18 5UD is shaped by this distinct geographical position in central Scotland. You live in a setting that balances proximity to broader regions while maintaining a localised residential identity. The area represents a slice of the larger landscape, defined by its specific boundaries and inclusion in the lieutenancy area.
Household Size
Accommodation Type
Tenure
Ethnic Group
Religion
Household Composition
Age
Household Deprivation
NS-SEC
Explore more demographic insights in this area
Go to Demographics tabPlanning
Planning Constraints
- Flood RiskPremium
- Ramsar Wetland SitesPremium
- Area of Outstanding Natural BeautyPremium
- Protected Nature ReservePremium
- Protected WoodlandPremium
- Crime RiskPremium