| Introduction |
Edinburgh
2001 and Beyond
To coincide with the issue of Instant magazine's New Reekie
article by Adrian Welch on the projects to commence or come to fruition
this year. Inclusion depends on projects size and interest, ranging
from the New Infirmary to The Tun.
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| Old
Town |
New
Scottish Parliament , Holyrood
Rd, 1999-2002
EMBT
Architects (Barcelona) / RMJM
(Edinburgh)
Most reports of the new Parliament building have focused on the cost,
but innovative architecture does not come cheap. Scotland has so few
exuberant buildings, and the fact that designer Enric
Miralles was not Scottish (the Spaniard succumbed to a brain tumour
in July 2000) seems irrelevant if Scotland is to become a member of
the 'global' community. An exciting building well worth waiting for. |
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| Edinburgh
Park |
A4
Building, Site A, Gyle, 1998-2001
CZWG
Architects (London)
From designer Piers Gough, who presented
Channel 4's "Shock of the Old" series (Oct 2000), this office
block will have a stepped inner court which has been described as
a modern-day Hanging Gardens of Babylon. It certanly makes a change
from some of the boxes already dotting the Gogar landscape. |
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| Old
Town |
Northern
Lights @ Fruitmarket Gallery,
45 Market St, 1999-2001
Richard
Murphy Architects (Edinburgh)
Richard Murphy Architects have designed - with Peter Fink the London
lighting designer - a radical lighting scheme for the building and
pavement entitled 'Northern Lights' to be unveiled on January 1st
2001 (bottom right). The light pipe in the pavement - 16.7 billion
colour options - and the colour blasters to the soffit and glass blocks
are all by LTP and specified by Peter Fink at art2Architecture.
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| Old
Town |
The Tun, Holyrood Rd, 1999-2000
Allan Murray Architects
(Edinburgh)
This will be the new home for the BBC, European Parliament outpost
and Scottish & Newcastle, all next door-but-one to the new Scottish
Parliament. The long, thin building will add to the Old Town's herring-bone
pattern, rising on dramatically-angled concrete stilts with a green,
pre-patinated copper facade leaning out over the main road.
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| Leith |
Coalhill Housing, The Shore, 2000-2001
Allan Murray Architects (Edinburgh)
This Buredi housing association project occupies a prominent position
overlooking the Water of Leith. The architects' crisp, white trademark
style is here augmented with a maritime theme. |

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| Leith |
Ocean Terminal, Western Harbour,
1999-2001
Conran
& Partners (London) & Keppie
Design (Glasgow)
This huge £67m shopping centre and cinema complex is on
schedule to open in mid-2001. It will provide the new home for the
Former Royal Yacht Britannia as well as three restaurants by Sir Terence
Conran, shops (including 'anchor store' Debenhams), a twelve-screen
cinema complex and a triple-height Food Hall looking out over the
Western Harbour to Fife.
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| Old
Town |
Tron Square Housing, 2001-2002
Richard Murphy Architects (Edinburgh)
This project of high-density housing association flats just down from
the Royal Mile, has a modern feel, but uses traditional Old Town motifs.
Inspired by a famous aerial map of 1647, the proposal is for two tall,
thin, free-standing buildings separated by a 'vertiginous' close.
Goes on site imminently.
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| New
Town |
Harvey Nichols, The Walk,
St Andrew Square, 2000-02
Comprehensive Design (Edinburgh)
+ Lifschutz
Davidson (London)
That monstrosity of a bus station is no more, and work has started
on the £20m upmarket department store, including a top floor
bar and restaurant complex with terrace. The area's overall £50m
retail development is roughly the same size as the Gyle Shopping Centre
- but in the middle of the city. Will include the first new street
in the New Town since the 18th century and a re-configuration of the
bus terminal, with vehicles no longer using the St.Andrew Square exit.
Expected completion late next year.
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| New
Town |
Calton Square & omniedinburgh,
Calton Hill, 2000-02
Allan Murray Architects (Edinburgh)
After thirty years, the gap site next to the Edinburgh
Playhouse opposite John Lewis'
is finally being developed, albeit with another multi-screen cinema/shop/office
complex. After the last scheme was rejected as 'too boring', the building
now going up is far from dull. The first phase involves a 12-screen
by Warner Village Cinemas, restaurants, health club and nightclub;
the second phase is a massive development which the Council had shown
interest in moving into, but is now all pre-let to Baillie Gifford.
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|
City |
CERT: City of Edinburgh Rapid Transport
Since the article was written the CERT scheme has been abandoned:
previously I wrote:-
Although the City of Edinburgh Council is back in talks with the second-place
bidder, following a steep rise in the projected cost of the winning
(and orginally worryingly cheap) scheme, there is yet to be an announcement
of when - if ever - this project will start. It is vital that Edinburgh
grasps this opportunity to limit car journeys, and should do so as
soon as possible. |
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The following projects didn't make the cut:
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| Lothian
Rd |
Exchange
Tower
Comprehensive Design (Edinburgh)
At thirteen storeys, Edinburgh's tallest building near Haymarket is
a '70's throwback office block re-clad with mirrored glass and given
a major internal renewal. Heading for an Easter opening as part of
The Exchange ongoing office development off lower Lothian Road.
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| New
Town |
Royal Scottish Academy Project
The Mound
John
Miller & Partners (London) (Phase 1: 2001-03):
A competition-winning Project to link the Royal Scottish Academy with
the National Gallery of Scotland (both Grade One Listed), with a new
Concourse Level under the existing Mound.
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| Old
Town |
New Street Edinburgh: Bus Station Re-development
Gensler
(London) and Hackland & Dore
(Edinburgh) 2001-03
The largest architectural firm in the world has designed an intriguing
scheme for a syndicate of businessmen: Calton Gate. This £50m
redevelopment of the redundant bus depot is currently going through
planning. It has been described by the syndicate as the biggest single
development in the Old Town since the area was first developed in
the 12th century, and larger than The Exchange masterplanning area
on Lothian Road. A rolling grass roof is proposed with a bridge over
the rail tracks to Calton Hill [the bridge pending funding, ed.].
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| Environs |
Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, Petit
France, 1996-2002
Keppie Design (Glasgow)
This new hospital/teaching complex at Little France below Craigmillar
Castle comprises 120,000 square metres of floor area, accomodating
869 beds and 24 operating theatres with support facilities. Begun
in 1996, the £150m project is due for completion in late 2002.
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| Edinburgh
Park |
A3
Building, Site A, Gyle, 1997-2001
Gordon Murray + Alan Dunlop Architects
(Glasgow)
Highly contemporary building which shows Dutch influences, with folded
entry plane made of green Spanish slate and cantilevered roof overshooting
the south facade. |
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Projects on hold or about to change: |
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Summary
(added May 2001) |
Since the article was published the GPO refurbishment has been
approved, the Science Centre is now in Planning, Railtrack are considering
a competition for Waverley, and details for the Granton masterplan
have been made public (see Interviews).
The proposed RBS demolition of New St. Andrew's House - the
towering bulk over the St James
Centre - and subsequent new RBS HQ building
is on hold due to negotiations with the adjoining siteowner being
called off. The GPO building - Edinburgh
Post Office (top right) is still empty as developers work behind
the scenes for the right deal, and the proposed £3m Edinburgh Science
Centre for the gap site by the City Art Centre is about to go
through a major re-design. Then there is the famous architecture theorist,
Charles Jencks and his SNGMA landscaping. Right in the centre,
Railtrack are still considering the re-development of Waverley
Station having been initially knocked back over raising the station
roof by 3m. New images are expected by Spring of the New St. bus station
re-development and of proposals for the old Royal Infirmary
site on Lauriston Place. Finally there is the huge masterplanning
development by Granton Harbour which aims to include social
housing, offices and retail pending. |
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| Three
of these in more detail |
Granton Masterplan, Granton
Lewellyn Davies (London)
This huge £100m masterplanning development - entitled Waterfront Edinburgh
- involves social housing, offices and retail by Granton Harbour and
the listed gasometers. Architects involved so far are of the highest
calibre, and include Page
& Park (masterplan), Simpson
& Brown, Malcolm
Fraser Architects (Madelvic Car Factory) and originally CZWG and
EDAW
(and less publicly, Conran & Partners) as masterplanning architects.
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Ocean
Point: Leith Waterfront Office Development, Leith
Terry
Farrell & Partners (London; Edinburgh)
This is a major new £55 million prestigious office development alongside
the Ocean Terminal Shopping Centre in the heart of Leith's dockland
area. Morrison Developments Ltd has secured the site from Forth Ports
plc: a detailed planning application for the dockland's project which
will comprise two individual buildings, one thirteen and one nine
storey, is due to be submitted before the end of the year. Subject
to planning, work is expected to commence on site in summer 2001,
with completion due in 2003.
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Earthworks
at SNGMA
Terry Farrell & Partners (London; Edinburgh)
Wacky spirals of earth by famous architect and philosopher Charles
Jencks - who lives in the Borders, despite writing most of his
books in, and about, American architecture. He is collaborating with
Terry Farrell & Partners, the designers of the refurbishment of Burn's
School to form the Dean Gallery.
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