Old Town, Edinburgh Explained

Image Upright:1.2
Location:Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom
Part Of:Old and New Towns of Edinburgh
Criteria:(ii)(iv)
Id:728
Coordinates:55.9476°N -3.1916°W
Year:1995

The Old Town (Scots: Auld Toun) is the name popularly given to the oldest part of Scotland's capital city of Edinburgh. The area has preserved much of its medieval street plan and many Reformation-era buildings. Together with the 18th/19th-century New Town, and West End, it forms part of a protected UNESCO World Heritage Site.[1]

Royal Mile

The "Royal Mile" is a name coined in the early 20th century for the main street of the Old Town which runs on a downwards slope from Edinburgh Castle to Holyrood Palace and the ruined Holyrood Abbey. Narrow closes (alleyways), often no more than a few feet wide, lead steeply downhill to both north and south of the main spine which runs west to east.

Significant buildings in the Old Town include St. Giles' Cathedral, the General Assembly Hall of the Church of Scotland, the National Museum of Scotland, the Old College of the University of Edinburgh, Parliament House and the Scottish Parliament Building. The area contains underground vaults and hidden passages that are relics of previous phases of construction.

No part of the street is officially called The Royal Mile in terms of legal addresses. The actual street names (running west to east) are Castlehill, Lawnmarket, High Street, Canongate and Abbey Strand.

Street layout

The street layout, typical of the old quarters of many northern European cities, is made especially picturesque in Edinburgh, where the castle perches on top of a rocky crag, the remnants of an extinct volcano, and the main street runs down the crest of a ridge from it. This "crag and tail" landform was created during the last ice age when receding glaciers scoured across the land pushing soft soil aside but being split by harder crags of volcanic rock. The hilltop crag was the earliest part of the city to develop, becoming fortified and eventually developing into the current Edinburgh Castle. The rest of the city grew slowly down the tail of land from the Castle Rock. This was an easily defended spot with marshland on the south and a man-made loch, the Nor Loch, on the north. Access to the town was restricted by means of various gates (called ports) in the city walls, of which only fragmentary sections remain.

The original strong linear spine of the Royal Mile only had narrow closes and wynds leading off its sides. These began to be supplemented from the late 18th century with wide new north–south routes, beginning with the North Bridge/South Bridge route, and then George IV Bridge. These rectilinear forms were complemented from the mid-19th century with more serpentine forms, starting with Cockburn Street, laid out by Peddie and Kinnear in 1856, which specifically improved access between the Royal Mile and the newly built Waverley Station.

The Edinburgh City Improvement Act of 1866 further added to the north south routes. This was devised by the architects David Cousin and John Lessels.[2] It had quite radical effects:

Sections

In addition to the Royal Mile, the Old Town may be divided into various areas, namely from west to east:

Residential buildings

Due to the space restrictions imposed by the narrowness of the "tail", and the advantages of living within the defensive wall, the Old Town became home to some of the world's earliest "high rise" residential buildings. Multi-storey dwellings became the norm from the 16th century onwards. Many of these buildings were destroyed in the Great Fire of Edinburgh in 1824; the rebuilding of these on the original foundations led to changes in the ground level and the creation of numerous passages and vaults under the Old Town. The construction of new streets including North Bridge and South Bridge in the 18th century also created underground spaces, such as the Edinburgh Vaults below the latter.

Traditionally buildings were less dense in the eastern, Canongate, section. This area underwent major slum clearance and reconstruction in the 1950s, thereafter becoming an area largely of Council housing. From 1990 to 2010, major new housing schemes appeared throughout the Canongate. These were built to a much higher scale than the older buildings and have greatly increased the population of the area.

Archaeology

Archaeological work is usually required to be undertaken in advance of development work in the Old Town and this work has shed light on aspects of the Old Town's past. Some recent excavations have been:

Major events

In 1824 a major fire, the Great Fire of Edinburgh, destroyed most of the buildings on the south side of the High Street section between St. Giles Cathedral and the Tron Kirk.

During the Edinburgh International Festival the High Street and Hunter Square become gathering points where performers in the Fringe advertise their shows, often through street performances.

On 7 December 2002, the Cowgate fire destroyed a small but dense group of old buildings on the Cowgate and South Bridge. It destroyed the famous comedy club, The Gilded Balloon, and much of the Informatics Department of the University of Edinburgh, including the comprehensive artificial intelligence library.[13] The site was redeveloped 2013-2014 with a single new building, largely in hotel use.

Old Town Renewal Trust

In the 1990s the Old Town Renewal Trust in conjunction with the City of Edinburgh developed an action plan for renewal

Redevelopment

See main article: Caltongate. An area directly to the north of the Canongate has seen a large redevelopment project originally named Caltongate, but since rebranded as New Waverley. The scheme involved building of a mix of residential, hotel, retail and office buildings on the site of the former SMT bus depot in New Street, developing the arches under Jeffrey Street, redeveloping other surrounding sites and creating a pedestrian link from the Royal Mile to Calton Hill.[14] The proposals were criticised by commentators including the author Alexander McCall Smith and Sheila Gilmore MP who regard the modern design as incompatible with the existing older architectural styles of the Old Town and inappropriate for a UNESCO World Heritage site.[15] The Caltongate development was also opposed by the Cockburn Association[16] and the Architectural Heritage Society of Scotland. The site developers Artisan Real Estate Investors have stated that the completed development will be a "vibrant, exciting" place. The plans were approved by the City of Edinburgh Council in January 2014[17] with construction taking place in the late 2010s.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Edinburgh-World Heritage Site. 10 February 2013. VisitScotland. https://web.archive.org/web/20130222081642/http://www.edinburgh.org/about/about-edinburgh/world-heritage-site. 22 February 2013. dead. dmy-all.
  2. Edinburgh: Mapping the City by Christopher Fleet and Danial MacCannell
  3. Web site: Vol 67 (2017): Where There's Muck There's Money: The Excavation of Medieval and Post-Medieval Middens and Associated Tenement at Advocate's Close, Edinburgh Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports. 2021-08-30. journals.socantscot.org.
  4. Web site: Vol 58 (2014): Excavations at Jeffrey Street, Edinburgh: the development of closes and tenements north of the Royal Mile during the 16th-18th centuries Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports. 2021-08-26. journals.socantscot.org.
  5. Web site: Vol 56 (2013): Excavations in the Canongate Backlands, Edinburgh Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports. 2021-08-26. journals.socantscot.org.
  6. Web site: Vol 56 (2013): Excavations in the Canongate Backlands, Edinburgh Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports. 2021-08-26. journals.socantscot.org.
  7. Web site: Vol 42 (2011): Through the Cowgatelife in 15th-century Edinburgh as revealed by excavations at St Patrick's Church Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports. 2021-08-26. journals.socantscot.org.
  8. Web site: Vol 78 (2018): The Excavation of a Medieval Burgh Ditch at East Market Street, Edinburgh: Around the Town Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports. 2021-09-04. journals.socantscot.org.
  9. Web site: Vol 40 (2010): Artefactual, environmental and archaeological evidence from the Holyrood Parliament Site excavations Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports. 2021-08-26. journals.socantscot.org.
  10. Web site: Vol 22 (2006): Archaeological excavations in St Giles' Cathedral Edinburgh, 1981-93 Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports. 2021-08-26. journals.socantscot.org.
  11. Web site: Vol 10 (2004): Conservation and change on Edinburgh's defences:archaeological investigation and building recording of the Flodden Wall, Grassmarket 1998-2001 Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports. 2021-08-26. journals.socantscot.org.
  12. Web site: Vol 55 (2013): Marlin's Wynd: new archaeological and documentary research on Post-medieval settlement below the Tron Kirk, Edinburgh. Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports. 2021-08-26. journals.socantscot.org.
  13. Web site: Fire guts Edinburgh's AI library. Tim Richardson 12 Dec 2002. at 09:36. www.theregister.co.uk.
  14. Web site: Caltongate masterplan. Frameworks, masterplans and design briefs. City of Edinburgh. 30 January 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140219094652/http://www.edinburgh.gov.uk/downloads/file/1889/caltongate_masterplan. 19 February 2014. dead. dmy-all.
  15. News: Caltongate development approved by Edinburgh Council. 30 January 2014. Scotland on Sunday. 29 January 2014.
  16. Web site: The Caltongate Development. Cockburn Association. 30 January 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140201194241/http://www.cockburnassociation.org.uk/?page=81. 1 February 2014. dead. dmy-all.
  17. Web site: Caltongate work to start in summer . Edinburgh Evening News . 30 January 2014 . 31 January 2014 . David McCann.