Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement

Endinburgh Council
 
 
Friday, 18th December 2009 Change Date

We Will Rock You - see it in Edinburgh this Christmas

Security fears after vandals hit old cinema

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 04 November 2009
CAMPAIGNERS fighting to save a former B-listed cinema from demolition have called for better security after vandals broke into the historic building.
The empty Odeon building, on Clerk Street, was broken into after vandals kicked in a back door at the weekend.

A smashed statue from the building was later found dumped in a shopping trolley outside.

Passers-by discovered the damage on Saturda
y morning and police are now looking to trace a man seen in the area on Friday afternoon as part of their inquiries.

Campaigner Sana Bilgrami said: "I was walking past at about noon and saw the back gate on Buccleuch Street was broken so we called the police.

"One statue was lying broken in a shopping trolley and there were bits of plaster scattered on the ground outside."

Officers secured the building after checking it was empty.

Campaigners believe the building may have been broken into before and insist more should be done to protect the site, which has lain empty for years.

Its owners, Duddingston House Properties (DHP), controversially want to partly demolish it to make way for a boutique hotel.

Labour peer Lord Foulkes – a key campaigner for the restoration of the building – said: "I can completely understand these security concerns and share them. The building does not seem very secure."

DHP bought the Clerk Street site six years ago and insists its proposed hotel development is the only way to safeguard the building's future.

Its plans involve extensive renovation of the interior as well as the demolition of the cinema's B-listed auditorium.

But owing to great public opposition, the Scottish Government is now reviewing the case, with a decision expected soon.

Lord Foulkes said: "If it is decided the building's listed status should stay, then it cannot be demolished."

He added that he would call a meeting with culture minister Mike Russell to discuss other alternatives for the site not involving demolition.

A police spokesman confirmed officers attended a break-in at the cinema. He said: "Nothing was reported stolen. However, a door within had been vandalised. We are now keen to speak to a male seen around the area at 4:30pm on 30 October."

He is white, in his late-30s, medium to heavy build, clean-shaven with fair hair and using crutches.

A spokesman for DHP said the site had been secured since the break-in, but the issue was being looked into urgently.





Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 04 November 2009 10:33 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Incandescent,

04/11/2009 12:04:59
Well I never. Who would have thought such a thing would happen...apart from the owners.
2

Amenemhat,

04/11/2009 12:11:51
oops what's the chances the doors were accidentally left open.... fire sale anyone?
3

alfonsa pedrosa,

embra 04/11/2009 12:25:18
And whos fault is that then Sana,the place may be filled with overseas people with sleeping bags.
4

Paul Voltaire,

04/11/2009 12:40:49
If the geezer is on crutches, the polis may still catch him if they get a move on.
5

Buttress,

04/11/2009 12:52:33
My, my. Such a surprise that it isn't properly secured.

6

Duncan in Edinburgh,

04/11/2009 13:04:17
This is indeed a shocking and unforeseeable event, just like the fire will be.
7

Ecto,

04/11/2009 13:08:47
Yeah it won't be long until it mysteriously catches fire, then it will be green light for hotelsville. There is a track record of this mysterious behaviour and deralict property in the city
8

Rugal,

04/11/2009 13:34:27
The sooner the developer is allowed to build their luxury apartments/hotel the better. A major fire in this building could have dire consequences for neighbouring properties and the students living in them.

The Southside needs to be developed or it'll turn into a student ghetto. Oh wait a minute...
9

dba,

Edinburgh 04/11/2009 14:25:08
DHP has a 'duty of acre' to safeguard and protect a listed building. THEY KNEW about it's status when they purchased it...but they would appear to be unable (or unwilling) to discharge their legal obligations until such time as all due process is completed.
Sunch attitudes would appear to be endemic when high-values (listed) sites are acquired...come on DHP - GET YOUR ACT TOGETHER.
10

yo listen up my peeps,

04/11/2009 18:40:04
so what its sitting doing nothing anyway. the statue needs to be shown a good time. i would have taken it to cav if i had seen it. Bet they played weigey bord.
11

The Breakfast Blob,

Edinburgh 04/11/2009 19:08:41
Can someone tell 10 how to conduct themselves in a civilised society, like learning how to spell, speak and generally, keep your face shut on matters you know bog all about. The Odeon is a fantastic building, inside and out and I really do hope that it can remain as a theatre or venue of some kind, before the 'accidental fire'. Our city is run by crooks and imbeciles. SOCIALISTS TO A MAN. Vote SNP - KILL THE LABOUR PARTY!
12

Duncan in Edinburgh,

04/11/2009 19:13:11
#11 Perhaps that same person can explain a few things to you - like the fact that Labour have been OUT of power in Edinburgh since 2007, and the SNP is currently IN power in Edinburgh. So if our city is run by crooks and imbeciles, then they are SNP and Lib Dem crooks and imbeciles.

Oh, and the SNP espouses policies far to the left of the modern Labour party.

But other than that, well done.
13

Julian.,

edinburgh 04/11/2009 23:51:08
#11 Breakfast Blob,

Duncan beat me to it. Your last sentence was even more embarassing than number 10's post.

Do you actually live in this city?

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.