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School and Calton Hill revamp puts first pearl on city's string

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Published Date: 09 May 2008
A BLUEPRINT for a major revamp of the former Royal High School and the Calton Hill area is set to be approved by city councillors.
The move is the first step in the "string of pearls" masterplan to transform the city centre, with specific designs for the revival of Princes Street now expected within months.

The revamp has won widespread support from heritage bodies and commun
ity groups, paving the way for a range of buildings in and around the historic school to be redeveloped or replaced.

The proposals include new cafes and shops and possibly a hotel or flats, while the central campus building will house a new cultural attraction, such as the long-awaited national photography centre.

A few changes have been made on the advice of consultees such as Historic Scotland and the Edinburgh World Heritage Trust.

These include downsizing plans for a European-style "piazza" to a more modest "public realm", while the council has vowed to protect the former school's historic features, including a listed telephone kiosk.

The area – known as "block ten" of the city centre redevelopment – was the first to have its own detailed brief drawn up.

Council leader Jenny Dawe, who this week called for action to improve Princes Street, said today: "Calton Hill and the Royal High buildings are iconic symbols of Edinburgh and it is therefore very fitting that this should be the first block to be developed as part of the city centre rejuvenation.

"We want to create better access to the Princes Street area and encourage people to spend time there, by building on the cultural and tourism opportunities linked to the site."

Among the buildings earmarked for a revamp are the school's gym, which was built in 1885 and could become a hotel, hospitality facilities or flats.

Walkways would also be upgraded to create a more attractive location for pedestrians.

Backers of the national photography centre scheme recently submitted a final business case for the £20 million venture to the Scottish Government. But there are a number of other investors and organisations who also have in interest in the school building.

The council's director of city development, Dave Anderson, said: "The successful regeneration of the area will be largely dependent on a viable reuse for the former Royal High School.

"This will encourage movement to and within the area, and help realise the aspirations contained within the brief."

More work will be carried out on transport arrangements at the site, following a warning from Lothian Buses that any attempt to restrict traffic on Regent Road will displace vehicles on to London Road or the Royal Mile.

There were also warnings that air pollution could worsen as a result, and the need for another hotel and a tourist information centre has been questioned.

No cost or timescale has yet been attached. But if, as expected, councillors back the scheme next Thursday, officers will approach interested investors.

Separate development briefs for blocks one to seven of the city centre – from Charlotte Square to the St James Centre – are likely to go out for consultation over the summer.





The full article contains 528 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 09 May 2008 11:28 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Buttress,

09/05/2008 12:04:50
Next - could something be done with the dreadful Waverley Steps?

Not a great intro to the city for anyone arriving by train.

Too much to hope the tacky Princes Mall could be bulldozed I suppose...
2

alex paterson,

At the moment in Sevilla 09/05/2008 12:07:47
Why did they not revamp it a while back and use it for the Parliament,now that would have been some saving.
3

carrottop,

Dumfries 09/05/2008 12:12:03
Could maybe use it as a Midlothian Parliament building when we devolve from Scotland.
Photographic museum? yawn..............
4

Some guy,

09/05/2008 12:23:22
Thats to understated an idea for a government you dont think they'd use a cheaper existing site when they could build a big billion quid "landmark" design..

#1 i think i remember a while back reading they were going to spend a few million doing up waverley steps.
5

Buttress,

09/05/2008 12:25:41
'while the council has vowed to protect the former school's historic features, including a listed telephone kiosk...'


However, they are happy to sell the listed Canongate Venture to be bulldozed for the ghastly Caltongate development!

Historic buildings and structures are only to be protected when it suits the council and they aren't set to make cash out of the deal, then?

www.eh8.org.uk





6

,

09/05/2008 12:28:27
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7

Buttress,

09/05/2008 12:28:59
Yes I heard rumours that cash was to be spend (escalators?) but in the meanwhile what a tacky mess they are.

As indeed is the station itself in some places - despite a great deal of recent cash spent.

The wonderful booking hall could do with a more sensitive treatment - get rid of the ugly coffee shop dumped in the middle and have some more sensitive signage - the red plastic shop sign for a burger chain for instance could go...



8

,

09/05/2008 12:29:12
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9

blackley,

Edinburgh 09/05/2008 12:34:12
National Photography Centre? Sod that build a school!
10

Sister H,

09/05/2008 13:02:05
..."possibly a hotel..."

Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
11

Embra boy,

Edinburgh 09/05/2008 13:43:20
To all of the above:

There's enough going on which which can justifiably be moaned about, without criticising a genuine good news story. I'm disappointed that no-one has yet made a positive comment about this development, which would see the reuse of the Royal High, and much-needed improvement to the dodgy slopes of Calton Hill.
12

Mr H 2u,

Embra 09/05/2008 13:45:45
Yup, that was the key phrase - "and possibly a hotel or flats".

Broon envelopes ahoy!
13

Teofilio Cubillas,

09/05/2008 14:03:16
If you're not careful, you can easily slip on the strings of pearls left by the rent boys and their customers on Calton Hill. But it's OK, it's not proper prostitution like straight people indulge in down Leith and it would be homophobic harrassment to do anything about it.
14

,

09/05/2008 14:09:15
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15

,

09/05/2008 14:30:48
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16

Loki - The Scourge of the Schemies,

EH1 09/05/2008 15:27:36
#2 Why did they not revamp it a while back and use it for the Parliament,now that would have been some saving.

Because Donald Dewar thought of it as a 'Nationalist shibolleth' and said 'No!' At the time, polls indicated much public support for the Scottish parliament to be set within the old RHS with a physical link to St Andrew's House.
17

Loki - The Scourge of the Schemies,

EH1 09/05/2008 15:30:49
#16 Teofilio
it would be homophobic harrassment to do anything about it.

Possibly. Police officers would be reluctant to make arrests in case they were later deemed to be bum raps.
18

Oli,

Edinburgh 09/05/2008 15:57:53
WTF is a "public realm"?

Another waste of space like Festival Sq or Castle st I'll bet.
19

,

09/05/2008 16:30:40
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20

,

09/05/2008 16:53:04
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21

Buttress,

09/05/2008 17:42:27
12

'There's enough going on which which can justifiably be moaned about, without criticising a genuine good news story. I'm disappointed that no-one has yet made a positive comment about this development, which would see the reuse of the Royal High, and much-needed improvement to the dodgy slopes of Calton Hill'

I agree that things which help are to be applauded.

The devil will be in the detail,though. I am less than convinced that it will be the best scheme for the area.

Conservation groups such as EWHT and the Cockburn Assoc which have many ideas backed up by major expertise re historic areas are all too often ignored, although consulted.

I cite St Andrew Square - nice to have it open, but it actually now looks like an exhibit at Chelsea by an expensive 'garden design firm'.

The materials chosen, the design, are too fussy and fight with the formality of the square and the main attraction of the garden - the statue - which seems to have been treated as an irrelevance. The 'coffee kiosk' is ghastly. IMHO of course.

Why is this council so committed to granite in the new town, too?

It's an alien material really.




22

,

09/05/2008 17:44:45
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23

lynbrown,

edinburgh 09/05/2008 19:27:52
I wish the News would make it clear in their regular stories about the Royal High that this building is in daily use. Many organisations have their offices there and my own employers, CLAN, ( City Literacy and Numeracy) have been working in there for years. Our adult learners find it distressing to read about all these plans for the future, without a thought for all the people already using the lovely old building.
24

Buttress,

09/05/2008 22:09:16
It's the same with the Caltongate development - people have been put out of homes and the Canongate Venture emptied, in order that the buildings can be sold for partial and total demolition. In these 'grand plans', ordinary people seem to have been forgotten.

25

Teofilio Cubillas,

10/05/2008 00:22:19
#17 - Thanks, I was a great player, made to look even better by the diddy Scots in that great 3-1 victory. Nowadays I live quietly in the Seafield area, shooting paintballs at passing women and complaining about the smell from the sewage works. Oh, and how Princes street is full of baseball capped vermin who say 'eh?' at the end of every sentence, eh?
26

Navvy,

10/05/2008 01:56:19
Still time to make a proper parliament building and we could sell Holyrood for 400M, no let us say it has some added value by now, 750M

 

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