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Helen Martin: Our city can't be a museum piece



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Published Date: 17 November 2008
ABOUT 50 years ago, as a little Glaswegian girl, I would often be brought through by train to visit the Edinburgh side of the family. The usual walking route from Waverley was up the Bridges, looking across to the Castle, back at Princes Street, down on the rail tracks and gardens and strolling past the old Scotsman building and on to the museum.
Then we'd turn left at Drummond Street and arrive at Roxburgh Terrace, No. 5 to be precise. Another route involved cutting through the Cowgate and climbing a mountain of steps.

The tenement block has been demolished now and replaced with student
flats but the view from the window then, as now, was across to Heriot-Watt University and beyond, to the Time Ball on Calton Hill which dropped in summer time coinciding with the One o'Clock Gun.

If I had never set foot in Edinburgh since, I could make the same journey today and see the same views, albeit that the shops on the Bridges have drifted sadly downmarket.

As with most of the city centre, very little has fundamentally changed. So I was baffled by a warning from Unesco that change and modern development could threaten the city's World Heritage Site status.

Very few cities in the UK are as consistent as Edinburgh. By comparison, it is a mere 20 years since I lived in Glasgow, but in that time the view of the city from the M8 would be almost unrecognisable if it wasn't for the Clyde running through the middle of it.

Among the upcoming Capital developments which, it was claimed, could pose a problem to World Heritage status was a new skyscraper hotel at Haymarket and the regeneration of Leith Docks, neither of which in my book could be said to be at the heart of the city or have any effect on the integrity of the Old and New Towns, on which most of the heritage status is based.

Even less relevant is the long-awaited replacement of the St James Centre. It's a monstrous carbuncle today and architects would have to go some to make the new building any worse.

Unesco claims it is not suggesting that "cities should be maintained like museums" and thankfully it seems they are going to be true to their word with the suggestion that the city's status is unlikely to change despite some major developments in the centre, most notoriously the Caltongate project.

The city's economic developers and Chamber of Commerce were also concerned that World Heritage status could become an excuse for lethargy or inertia, encouraging us to hang on grimly to the old rather than trying to marry it with the new (I paraphrase, but that's the gist).

We are all proud of Edinburgh's history and unique architecture. But, despite impressions to the contrary, Edinburgh is not just a tourist destination.

It's all very well for York, for example, to remain preserved in aspic. It isn't a capital. It isn't a seat of government, finance and law. Clearly it has some commerce but it isn't a national wealth generator like Edinburgh or London. Note the lack of objection to London's skyscrapers. No, it is understood London must, despite its plethora of historical sites, move with the times and keep its cutting edge as an economic powerhouse.

Indeed, it is just as well that there was no such thing as World Heritage in the 1700s or the New Town, then a bold piece of modern architecture, would never have happened and Princes Street Gardens would still be the Nor' Loch.

Protecting the old shouldn't mean preventing the new. What will we lay down today that will become the Gardens or the New Town of the future? And, perhaps more to the point, how can we hope to afford the upkeep and high-class maintenance of our heritage if our economic development is hindered?

No-one is suggesting demolishing the Castle or running a motorway through the Gardens. But nor should we be forced to be the city equivalent of Miss Haversham, presiding over our wedding cake castle and palace while the cobwebs grow and prosperity declines.

The party's over
ONCE more it seems the banks are having huge problems coming to terms with what is, and is not, appropriate in the new order.

Christmas parties and internal award celebrations have been cancelled or toned down, but only after widespread condemnation.

Ten quid a head might seem modest to them for an annual piss-up. However, the comparison should not be with what they spent last year, but with what most companies outwith the finance industry can offer their staff . . . that is, nothing.

Nor have they come to terms with public ownership and stake-holding. So used are they to throwing around our money (previously, just that which we banked with them) that they fail to see the significant difference today in throwing around our money (that which we have loaned them to get them out of their incompetence abyss).

They are still inexplicably shameless about fiddling while we burn.

Take a hint, you silly bankers. Keep the heid down. Work your pinstripes off getting us all out of this hole. Forget parties, hand-outs or bonuses for just doing your job and, like everyone else, be grateful that – for the meantime – you're still in one.





The full article contains 900 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 17 November 2008 9:23 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Buttress,

17/11/2008 11:26:03
This is one of the most ill-informed and ill-considered pieces I have ever read. UNESCO did not threaten anything at all. It was asked to visit by Historic Scotland.

York is not a World Heritage Site, and nor is it set in aspic. It marries new in sympathy with the old. Shame Edinburgh doesn't.

And yes there are objections to London skyscrapers - many have been the subject of public inquiries.

The Haymarket is going to be the subject of a public inquiry.

No-one is suggesting that there is no development - just world class development. Too much that is happening is not.
2

Jasbar,

17/11/2008 12:46:06
We don't need a skyscraper hotel at Haymarket.

Doesn't attempting to build one suggest a triumph of brown envelopes over political lobbying?

Isn't it so far off the radar that there should be a full public inquiry into how planning consent was given in the first place?
3

Destroy the Planet,

17/11/2008 12:58:00
Is it just me or do i smell the waft of corruption over our city, whats in it for you and your mates Helen ?
4

Buttress,

17/11/2008 13:42:43
Well, clearly she hadn't much idea about what she was writing so maybe it's just that she likes to fill her column inches no matter how wrong it all is?

Wonder how much she gets paid to write this stuff?

Bet the pals at the Chamber of Commerce will be helping her celebrate her latest literary triumph.

5

Buttress,

17/11/2008 13:46:13
Oh by the way - try thinking about the words 'buffer zone' Helen.

Dabbling in things you know nothing about, like OUV's. setting, and iconic skylines, just makes you sound daft.
6

Buttress,

17/11/2008 13:49:38
This was a rather better piece:

http://news.scotsman.com/opinion/Joyce-McMillan--Capital-gains.4697408.jp

But then - not a hack columnist like Helen Martin!
7

Logie Almond,

17/11/2008 16:53:35
Buttress:

"This is one of the most ill-informed and ill-considered pieces I have ever read".

What on earth do you expect? It's by Helen Martin for goodness sake.
8

Buttress,

17/11/2008 19:12:37
LOL!!!
9

Astragal,

18/11/2008 18:07:04
The logic of this argument defeats me.
Helen Martin seems to think that Edinburgh can withstand the kind of development that has so obviously destroyed Glasgow. I dont think so. The principal reason that the economy of Edinburgh is so successful is that up until now we have valued our heritage. Clever people like to live in beautiful cities. Its as simple as that.

Regarding capital cities I've never understood how Romans cope with all those gloomy old monuments.

Oh and by the way Helen you're about to loose your cherished view of the Calton hill - from Jeffrey street at least and the South Bridge will soon be wrecked so I think you will soon look back fondly on the days when you did live in a museum - one of the most beautiful in Europe

 

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