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Wednesday, 9th December 2009

Nostalgia: It's been a week of demolition in Edinburgh, so we look at the city's ever-changing face

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Nostalgia slideshow: Changes and construction across the Capital
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Published Date: 14 March 2009
THE face of Edinburgh seems to be ever changing. The demolition of 1960s homes in Muirhouse and the announcement of plans to bulldoze another scheme, Fort House in Leith, show how rarely things stand still.
Other changes are to follow, as the council looks to build more modern and cost-efficient housing but such large-scale changes are, of course, nothing new.

Leith Street has seen more than most in recent times, with the old shops and flats bulldozed in 1969 to make way for the St James Centre.

Just four years later, the demolition crews returned to raze more homes to make way for further development. The land featured in our photograph is now the multi-storey car park.

Forty years on, the St James Centre is about to be demolished again, to make way for an £850 million replacement, after becoming one of the city's most notorious eyesores.

The bulldozers returned to the east end of the city centre in 1982, this time to make way for Princes Mall, on the corner of Waverley Bridge and Princes Street.

One of the last stages of the demolition involved taking down the ornate Victorian iron arches of the old Waverley Market, which had stood since March 1, 1869.

The market had closed down in November 1972, ten years before the demolition, and after the new multi-million-pound shopping centre was built, one of the original arches was presented to the old Royal Scottish Museum.

Along Princes Street, the shops on the corner of Frederick Street, where the USC clothes store stands today, was the scene of another major demolition.

The Palace Hotel which stood there had to be torn down following a huge fire in June 1991 which destroyed the seven-storey building.

Further back along the street, the classic 1960s-style of the British Home Stores building is an obvious giveaway to its not-so-distant past.

The North Mercantile and Marine Insurance company occupied the building which was demolished in 1966 to make way for the department store.

Other local landmarks to have been taken down included the old railway bridge over the main road at Bonnington Toll, in 1968. The expansion of Edinburgh University's city centre campus also saw changes on the Southside in the late 1960s. Our photograph shows tenements on Marshall Street and Potterrow being pulled down.


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1

Charlie S,

Edinburgh 15/03/2009 15:39:33
Love the Nostalgia stuff BUT
"Along Princes Street, the shops on the corner of Frederick Street, where the USC clothes store stands today, was the scene of another major demolition.

The Palace Hotel which stood there had to be torn down following a huge fire in June 1991 which destroyed the seven-storey building."

The Fire Was at the corner of 113 - 117 Princes Street & Castle Street Try doing some research first

http://www.edinburgh.gov.uk/internet/attachments/internet/environment/planning_and_buildings/planning/development_frameworks/DraftHFblock_3.pdf


2

GarryB,

Dunbar 18/03/2009 12:37:26
So the St James Centre has become a notorious eyesore - wrong, it always was. Who says the replacement will be any better? The cooncil (always been good at that), the developers (surprise there) - anyone else? Still, if they get it wrong it can be knocked down in 40 years or so.

There seems an unspoken assumption that visual botches of the past can't be repeated. I can give three examples of modern buildings which are not acceptable in Edinburgh's unique cityscape - cooncil HQ by the station, replacement for LRC slab in George IV Bridge (no better than its predecessor), the U of Ed's new slab in Crichton St.
3

Ecto,

20/03/2009 14:11:44
it is absolutley astounding that so many buildings have been destroyed in this city and the coucil have been party to it over the years, the power of the broon envelope. I hope they are proud when it is all done and there is nothing left but false looking poorly constructed new buildings dotted at every corner.
4

COLINTON.MAINS,

Oakville Ontario 28/03/2009 01:13:55
EDINBURGH.demo.capital.off.the.world.to.late.folks.its.all.gone
5

Black Five,

edinburgh 28/03/2009 14:49:51
There`s plenty demolition going on just now in Leith ;Princes St and Haymarket.Thing is it need not be thanks to a loony liberal/labour/cons. councilors who went against the people of Edinburgh when they voted for the trams.
6

davross,

Leith 29/03/2009 12:31:25
Perhaps Charlie S should do some research first before commenting. It would be pretty difficult for the old Palace Hotel to be on the corner of Frederick Street and the corner of Castle Street at the same time!!! The building which houses USC is a Georgian house altered and extended over the years. The modern office block which replaced the old Palace Hotel is on the corner of Princes/Castle Street.

 

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