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Dalgety Bay, a coastal town in Fife, Scotland, stands on the north shore of the Firth of Forth.
   Dalgety Bay is the name of the town and the bay which fronts a large proportion of the shoreline. The bay was named after the original village of Dalgety, but the ruins of the 12th century St. Bridget's Kirk are all that now mark the site. St. Bridget's Kirk was in existence some time before 1178, as it's mentioned in a Papal Bull written by Pope Alexander III. The new town takes its name from the main bay it adjoins, but the town stretches over many bays and coves including Donibristle Bay and St David's Bay.
   The site of the new town once formed part of the estates of the Earl of Moray, part of whose mansion, Donibristle House, still exists but has been converted into luxury apartments. The area consisted of the Earl's extensive ornamental gardens and of a number of small villages.
   During World War I Morton Gray Stuart, 17th Earl of Moray donated a portion of his land to the Crown, which built a military airfield there. The Royal Air Force improved and expanded the aerodrome during World War II, and constructed an extensive aircraft maintenance facility there. Work done at this facility included repainting radium dials on bomber gauges, and during subsequent planning for the new town in the area, investigators found that the radioactive material used in this process had contaminated the ground. Currently, the land where there aerodrome once was has been turned into an industrial park, although ASDA and Play Planet both own areas, as well as the MOD, who own 859 Squadron Air Cadets current HQ.
   The current newtown of Dalgety Bay, built largely as a commuter town (anticipating the completion of the nearby Forth Road Bridge in 1964), dates from 1962. The town covers the land of the (by then disused) airstrip and much of the remaining ground of Donibristle House. Named after the neighbouring small bay in the Forth Estuary, Dalgety Bay ranked as the first "private enterprise new town" in Scotland. Although the developers removed most of the airstrip, small sections of the runway remain (including the apron of an aircraft factory which forms the town's tennis court). Donibristle Industrial Estate (immediately to the north of the town) also stands on part of the former runway. Like nearby Dunfermline, Dalgety Bay functions largely as a dormitory suburb of Edinburgh and to the rest of Fife. Dalgety Bay railway station is on the Fife Circle Line.
   ASDA have announced plans to build a new store on the former John Sutcliffe building in the Donibristle Industrial Estate and will now compete with Tesco who were going to leave the town. (External Link) Work started on the new store in the second half of 2007 and it's expected to open in Summer 2008.
   

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