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New Town, Edinburgh

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A beautiful view of Edinburgh New Town as seen from Edinburgh Castle, showing historic buildings and city streets.

New Town is a beautiful part of Edinburgh, the capital of Scotland. It was built between 1767 and around 1850. Many of its buildings still look the same as they did back then, with special neo-classical and Georgian styles. One of its most famous streets is Princes Street. It looks out over Edinburgh Castle and the Old Town across a valley. This valley used to hold a lake called the Nor Loch.

The gardens in New Town were given a special heritage designation in 2001. This means they are very important to history and culture. Together with the Old Town and the West End, New Town became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1995. This shows that it is one of the most important historic areas in the world.

Proposal and planning

The idea of building a New Town was first suggested in the late 1600s by the Duke of Albany and York, who later became King James VII and II. He wanted the city to grow north and build a bridge. But he left to become king in 1685 before much could be done.

Map of the city, showing the New Town (mid brown), the Old Town, and the West End, with the World Heritage Site indicated by the red line.

Later, city leaders decided to build the New Town because the Old Town was too crowded. Wealthy people were moving away. During the Age of Enlightenment, the old city didn’t fit the needs of professionals and merchants. Lord Provost George Drummond helped extend the city’s boundary to include land north of the Nor Loch, a polluted lake. Plans were made to drain the Loch, which finished in 1817. New bridges were built, like the North Bridge in 1772.

As the New Town grew, wealthier people moved from the Old Town into grand new Georgian houses with wide roads. The working classes stayed in the Old Town.

The First New Town

In January 1766, a contest was held to design a new part of the city. A young man named James Craig won. He made a simple grid of streets that followed the land. His plan had a main road along a ridge with two big open spaces, or squares, and several smaller streets.

Plan for the New Town by James Craig (1768)

The main street was named George Street after the king, George III. Other streets were named after important people and symbols. For example, St Andrew Square and St. George's Square were meant to show the union of Scotland and England. But the king did not like one of the names, so it was changed to Princes Street after his son.

View of the First New Town from Edinburgh Castle, largely obscured by modern shopping developments

Building the new area was hard at first because people did not like the empty land. The first builder, John Young, built a small group of houses called Thistle Court in 1767. As more people saw the area, building continued. One big house, Dundas House, was built instead of a church that was planned. Today, it is used by the Royal Bank of Scotland.

By 1820, most of the new area was finished, with Charlotte Square as its highlight. It was designed by Robert Adam and looks the same today. Some smaller parts were built much later, and some areas were never developed.

The New Town was mostly for homes, but shops soon appeared on Princes Street. Over time, many houses there became big stores. Today, parts of the New Town still have their original buildings from the late 1700s.

Northern, or Second, New Town and extensions

Great King Street. Part of the northern extension to the original New Town

After 1800, the first New Town was very popular. This led to plans for a bigger area called the Northern New Town, now known as the Second New Town. It aimed to grow Edinburgh north from Queen Street Gardens toward the Water of Leith. Building took place mostly between 1800 and 1830. The designs by William Sibbald copied the first New Town’s layout, with whole streets built together. Work continued on Hanover Street, also called Dundas Street, and Pitt Street (later called Dundas Street too). These streets stretched almost 1 km north to the Water of Leith at Canonmills, where Bellevue Crescent marked the northern end. Streets were planned with Great King Street as the main road, ending at Drummond Place to the east and Royal Circus to the west.

Much of the Second New Town built in the early 1800s still looks the same today. Large houses lined the east-west streets, while blocks of flats, called tenements in Scotland, stood on the north-south streets. Shops were mostly found only on the lower floors of the wider north-south streets. Bigger houses often had small buildings behind them for servants. The Picardy Place area, including Broughton Street and Union Street, was mostly finished by 1809. To the west, Shandwick Place, an extension of Princes Street, started in 1805. Melville Street and areas north of Shandwick Place were developed in 1825. The Gayfield Estate was planned in 1807 and built from around 1813, replacing the old village of Stockbridge. Painter Henry Raeburn began building on the Deanhough estate in 1813 and named Ann Street after his wife. In 1822, the Earl of Moray planned to develop his Drumsheugh estate between Charlotte Square and the Water of Leith. This area became popular with wealthy people. Most of it was finished by 1835, with many corner blocks added by the 1850s. It is now called the Moray Estate and is one of the city's most expensive areas. The growth continued into the estate of Lord Alva, forming the West End Village.

Eastern, or Third, New Town

To extend the New Town eastward, the Lord Provost, Sir John Marjoribanks, helped build the beautiful Regent Bridge. It was finished in 1819. The bridge crossed a deep valley, making it easier to travel from Princes Street to Calton Hill.

William Henry Playfair's plan for Edinburgh's Eastern New Town approved at a meeting on 27 September 1819, engraving by Wiliiam Home Lizars. Note that the orientation of the plan is with north on the left side, so Calton Hill is on the right.

Before the bridge was built, the Edinburgh Town Council planned the Eastern New Town. This area would stretch from the slopes of Calton Hill toward Leith, between Leith Walk and Easter Road. In 1811, the Lord Provost made an agreement with landowners, and some early surveys were done. There was a contest for design plans in 1813, but the results were unclear. Many famous architects gave their opinions.

The planners chose William Henry Playfair to design the area. He was hired in February 1818 and created a plan in April 1819. Playfair wanted to build a New Town even grander than before.

Regent Terrace, Carlton Terrace, and Royal Terrace on Calton Hill were built, along with Hillside Crescent and some nearby streets. Plans to build further north toward Leith were never finished. On the south side of Calton Hill, several monuments were put up, along with the Royal High School, designed in a Greek revival style by Thomas Hamilton.

West End

For the history and development of the West End of New Town see: West End, Edinburgh.

Other additions

Regent Terrace, part of Playfair's eastern extension of the New Town

In the 1820s, small buildings started to appear in Canonmills, but they were not finished yet. A tannery at Silvermills stopped growth nearby for many years. Building slowed in the 1830s, but after Thomas Telford finished the Dean Bridge in 1831, new buildings were added to the Dean Estate. These included the Dean Orphanage, which is now the Dean Gallery, Daniel Stewart's College, and streets like Buckingham Terrace and Learmonth Terrace.

In the 1800s, Edinburgh built a second railway with a tunnel under the New Town to connect Scotland Street to Canal Street, which later became part of Waverley Station. After the railway closed, the tunnel was used to grow mushrooms. During World War 2, it provided a safe place for people during air raids.

Principal losses

Drumsheugh Gardens. Part of the further western, Victorian extension to the New Town and West End

In the 1960s, there was a plan to build a walkway along Princes Street. This plan would have removed many buildings, but many people did not like it. Before the plan stopped in 1982, seven buildings were taken down. One was the old Boots building at 102 Princes Street. It had statues of famous people like William Wallace, Robert Burns, Sir Walter Scott, and Robert the Bruce. Other buildings removed were the North British & Mercantile Insurance Company building and the New Club, designed by William Burn.

Some streets near St James Square were also removed in the 1960s to make space for a shopping center and offices for the Scottish Office. Many homes in this area were taken down because they were old and not well kept. Most of Jamaica Street at the west end of the New Town was also removed for the same reason.

Bellevue House, built by Robert Adam in 1775, was taken down in the 1840s to make way for a railway tunnel.

Culture

The New Town has many important buildings. You can find the National Gallery of Scotland and the Royal Scottish Academy Building close together on The Mound. The Scottish National Portrait Gallery is on Queen Street. Other famous spots include the Assembly Rooms on George Street, the Balmoral Hotel with its big clock tower above Waverley Station, and the Scott Monument.

Typical New Town street lamps (in Nelson Street)

The Cockburn Association works hard to protect the beautiful old buildings in the New Town.

Shopping

The New Town has Edinburgh’s main shopping streets. Princes Street has many chain shops, including the famous Jenners department store. George Street, once the financial centre, now has many modern bars in old banking halls. Multrees Walk on St. Andrew Square has Harvey Nichols and other designer shops.

The St. James Centre, an indoor mall finished in 1970, closed in 2016 and was torn down. It reopened in 2021 as the St James Quarter. Near Waverley Station, Waverley Market has many popular stores like Game, Costa, McDonald's, Sainsbury's, KFC, Subway, Superdry, and Greggs.

Notable residents

Many famous people lived in New Town, Edinburgh. Some of them are J M Barrie, Alexander Graham Bell, Mary Brunton, Thomas De Quincey, Arthur Conan Doyle, David Hume, Elsie Inglis, Ludovic Kennedy, Joseph Lister, James Clerk Maxwell, Peter McLagan, Ann Katharine Mitchell, Walter Scott, Catherine Sinclair, Moira Shearer, Mary Somerville, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Marie Stopes.

Images

Thistle Court is a notable building located in Edinburgh, Scotland.
A historic view of Charlotte Square in Edinburgh, showcasing elegant Georgian architecture designed by Robert Adam.
Historic Georgian buildings lining Princes Street in Edinburgh, Scotland.
Historic townhouses in Edinburgh New Town, Scotland.
A grand historic building on Calton Hill in Edinburgh, showcasing impressive architecture.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on New Town, Edinburgh, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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