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Monday, 2nd November 2009 Change Date Latest Issue

Princes Street redevelopment deal weeks from being signed

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Published Date: 04 March 2009
A MULTI-MILLION pound deal to transform the first block of buildings on Princes Street is just weeks away from being signed, the Evening News has learned.
A legal agreement for the redevelopment – which will include a new hotel and breakthrough to Hope Street Lane – has been drawn up with the owner of the flagship House of Fraser store and four other property owners.

A single investor has been lined up to transform the block, which council chiefs hope will happen in tandem with a revamp of Charlotte Square along the lines of the recent work at St Andrew Square.

The latest moves are part of the council's 20-year "string of pearls" vision which foresees various blocks along Princes Street developing with distinct characteristics. It is thought it will be several years before work begins.

Talks are also taking place with hotel operators for a number of sites elsewhere on the street, including the space above BHS at 64-68 Princes Street and above the Burger King restaurant at the east end of Princes Street.

It has emerged council chiefs are also in talks with clothing giant Primark about creating a new walkway through its newly planned store at 91-93 Princes Street to Rose Street and the rear of the soon-to-be refurbished Assembly Rooms. It is hoped the new Primark and walkway will be in place by early next year.

Dave Anderson, the council's director of city development, today said there had been a great deal of interest in investing in the Capital. Speaking from an international tourism conference in London, he said: "Despite the tough economic conditions, we are finding that people are attracted to the quality proposition that we have in Edinburgh. We are seeing steady progress with String of Pearls."

City leaders have also revealed plans for a new car park on Calton Road with around 40 spaces.

Other developments for Princes Street currently in the planning process include plans to add an extra storey to the B-listed Old Waverley Hotel on Princes Street, while a revised planning application for a 103-bedroom hotel at 121-123 Princes Street – originally slated for plans to encase it almost entirely in glass – should also be decided in the next few months.

Plans to reintroduce a number of flats in the upper floors of Princes Street are also on the cards.

The council's view is that the only way to regenerate Princes Street is on a block-by-block basis, rather than individual buildings.

An updated development blueprint released in November last year showed plans for public courtyards at the back of key buildings on Princes Street, such as Boots and Marks & Spencer.

They would complement proposals to introduce traditional shopping arcades along newly created breakthroughs between Princes Street and Rose Street, as well as a big revamp of the lanes around Rose Street.

• City council leader to woo rich Arabs

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1

Randan,

04/03/2009 12:00:53
A new car park on Calton Road?
There used to be a huge one until Caltongate started.
BTW Has it been cancelled yet?
2

Destroy the Planet,

04/03/2009 12:04:26
I wish they would stop using 'string of pearls', i dont think they know what it means, unless they plan to put kleenex dispensers along the road.

Anyways it'll be rubbish, the council are involved, and monkeys havent advanced that much recently.
3

Unimpressed one,

04/03/2009 12:09:53
Oh Gawd, another contribution to the permanent Edinburgh building site.
4

Harry Callahan,

04/03/2009 12:25:44
#2 Why an HBOS worker?
5

Sister Morag,

Lasswade 04/03/2009 12:28:08
Thank heavens it's not being referred to as a 'p*arl necklace'...

Anyway, three cheers for a much needed new hotel. Hip hip!
6

malcyh,

04/03/2009 12:37:56
Sister Morag...........tut tut you should understand that!
7

Jingsitsme,

EDINBURGH 04/03/2009 12:44:27
and then they will spoil it all with a tat shop right next door!!
8

Curious Yellow,

Edinburgh 04/03/2009 13:12:57
Any bets as to whether this will affect the (hopefully by then running) tram service? Looks to me as if the tram will pass right in front of the block - how do they propose to carry out all the asssociated roadworks without disrupting the service?

Of course, maybe we'll still be waiting by then.....
9

Bill MacD,

04/03/2009 13:19:26
"various blocks along Princes Street developing with distinct characteristics". In other words, let's destroy James Craig's original vision of a unified and coherent streetscape, which has inspired millions of citizens and visitors with its symmetry and elegance for hundreds of years, and let's instead impose a trendy architect's soul-less attempts to dump on the city a giant strip mall with zero local or historical resonance (which is reputation-death to any self-respecting art-school graduate fashionista) in which more cheap tat can be punted to generate more dosh. Sack the catastrophic planning team en masse NOW before it's too late.
10

Suntoucher,

Exiled 04/03/2009 13:30:33
#14 - Some good points made there. The article does makes it sound pretty awful and tacky though!
11

blackley,

Edinburgh 04/03/2009 13:42:15
Oh goody! More scaffolding and cones.
12

Think Tank,

04/03/2009 15:00:17
#14
"In other words, let's destroy James Craig's original vision of a unified and coherent streetscape, which has inspired millions of citizens and visitors with its symmetry and elegance for hundreds of years..."

Seriously, have you actually observed Princes Street? The continuum of concrete blocks of various forms (interrupted by the occasional masterpiece) does not match your description above.

It's clear that the String of Pearls will attract investment (esp. at this tough economic time) at the perceived 'better' parts of the street first- i.e. the East and West extremes. But hopefully once these blocks are improved, the central portion will become a tantalising prospect for would-be investors.

In my opinion, anyone defending the status quo of Princes Street needs to come up with a much better argument than that quoted above.

13

CPHibee - the second coming,

04/03/2009 19:19:24
Flat to let:

http://edinburgh.gumtree.com/edinburgh/11/35490311.html

14

Ian down under,

Musselburgh 04/03/2009 22:54:30
A car park with 40 spaces. that's all the transport problem solved then.
can cancel the buses, trams and trains now.
15

COLINTON.MAINS,

Oakville Ontario 04/03/2009 23:36:55
TAKE.PICTURES.NOW.FOLKS.BEFORE.ITS.ALL.DESTROYED
16

22shifter,

Edinburgh 05/03/2009 10:41:45
I agree #18, #17 does sound like a cooncil apologist. This is just whistling in the dark, Anything half built just now will probably be completed but that will be it, my guess is Frasers will go bankrupt and lie empty for years and they'll still be talking about demolishing the god-awful St. James centre in 10 years time!
17

Duncan in Edinburgh,

05/03/2009 10:44:37
#14 A little knowledge is a dangerous thing.

James Craig had absolutely no input into the design of the buildings on Princes Street. In fact, his vision for the New Town had George Street as the main thoroughfare, and it was the blossoming of the Gardens and the views of the Old Town which propelled more investment into Princes Street than George Street. The development of the buildings along Princes Street has been haphazard from the very beginning.

Please don't try to rewrite history to suit a present criticism.
18

RUBlind?,

Edinburgh 05/03/2009 13:41:17
#21

Have you seen Princes Street recently? Maybe not if you're in Canada. The photo's you're looking for were taken 100 years ago.

Anyway, anything that improves the current mis-match of outdated, unuseable and down right ugly buildings is worth a shot.
19

milk.monitor,

edinburgh 05/03/2009 19:03:06
What is the point of saying there will be pearly hotels dotted all along P St if you can't get to them in your car or taxi because there is a bleedin tram in the way?

Or do lots of people arrive at hotels by tram?

 

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