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Architect's rescue bid for capital 'albatross'

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Published Date: 28 January 2007
ONE OF Britain's leading design gurus has outlined his vision for a radical revamp of Edinburgh's Princes Street as a world-class boulevard.
Sir Terry Farrell, whose three-year unpaid stint as the city's design "champion" is about to come to an end, suggests the east end of the famous street should become the retail hub of the city centre.

Meanwhile, the central and west sections shou
ld become a magnet for cafes and restaurants, with high-quality housing above, he says.

Farrell, who has designed some of the world's most memorable buildings, outlines his vision in the latest edition of Holyrood magazine.

He describes Edinburgh as an "albatross of its own success", hampered in making bold new changes because of its status as a World Heritage site.

His proposals for Princes Street are aimed at boosting its attractions to shoppers and tourists at a time when its retailers face increasing competition from out-of-town shopping malls.

Farrell says the remedy often put forward is to start knocking down buildings and putting bigger ones in their place.

"But there is another way of looking at Princes Street," he says. "Ask yourself, is it a truly modern shopping centre or would it be better as a grand parade? You should really work with what you have got.

"You put the big floor space into the area that can take it. Then you take the centre and western parts of Princes Street and you work with its assets.

"You introduce a very wide pavement, kiosks and cafes in the gardens during the summer and turn it into a fantastic promenade."

The buildings on the north side, Farrell says, would have cafes and restaurants, while the upper floors could have small hotels and residential apartments "with a view unequalled in the world".



The full article contains 305 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 28 January 2007 12:24 AM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Edinburgh planning issues
 
1

MacCoinnich,

28/01/2007 01:36:03

"Farrell, who has designed some of the world's most memorable buildings." Seriously? There are many words I could use to describe the M15 building, the Edinburgh International Conference Centre, and office atop Charing Cross Station, but memorable wouldn't it.

2

Pete39,

Tassy 28/01/2007 06:52:26

It is not so much the design, but what company moves in. Jenners was about the last "classy" company in Princes Street. Have not been back there for a long time but I would not believe that there would be any store left that was unique or particularly upmarket. Most of them belong in shopping centres. You want to attract the tourists, you offer cheap rates and rental to the world's leading luxury stores then advertise Edinburgh's shopping experience. OK so not a lot of Scots will be able to shop there, but there is always the "drool" experience. Looking at things we would like, but could never afford. We used to do that a lot back in the fifties, but then we were more positive thinking then and "never" had a different meaning.

3

Scaramouche,

28/01/2007 10:48:50

Haven't we covered this story already????

4

mv,

28/01/2007 10:49:12

These "Princes Street to be upgrade according to top planner/architect/designer" every couple of weeks. So far the Street continues to die under the weight of bargain book shops, litter, mobile shops and tacky tartan tourist shops.

The councils recent response to all this was castle street, a souless design that has created some new taxi stands and oil stains.

Reduce rents, clean the place up, stop the bus bottlenecks at each end (queues of buses lined up at one end outputing fumes is not a tourist attraction), ban some types of shops (ie those above), upgrade ross bandstand and attract better quality concerts.

5

Rod,

Hell's Kitchen 28/01/2007 12:29:08

#2 Jenners was about the last "classy" company in Princes Street.

How true. I remember Smalls, Darlings, Forsyths, Jaeger, Mackies, tho original frontage of Boots and others. I also remember the bearded, sandalled, pipe-smoking architects of the late 60s who assured us that what we see today was the way forward.
Fortunately the madness of blasting a tunnel through Calton Hill and destruction of the Southside whilst constructing an elevated highway through the Meadows was nipped in the bud. Sadly, the same mindset is still evident in some today.

6

Old Town Resident,

28/01/2007 13:27:29

He describes Edinburgh as an "albatross of its own success", hampered in making bold new changes because of its status as a World Heritage site.
(read give architects,developers etc..carte blanche to do want they wish to our beautiful city, before they move on to the next...they don`t care.....immortality they crave till their grave..as Geddes and Hurd spin in theirs....)
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) seeks to encourage the identification, protection and preservation of cultural and natural heritage around the world considered to be of outstanding value to humanity. This is embodied in an international treaty called the Convention concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage, adopted by UNESCO in 1972
http://whc.unesco.org/en/about/
www.eh8.org.uk

7

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 28/01/2007 15:24:45

Why cannot working within the guidelines of Princes Street's designation as a World Heritage Site produce something that is workable and attractive to tourists AND brings back the good residents of Edinburgh?

8

Loki - The Scourge of the Schemies,

Valhala 28/01/2007 16:55:57

It amazes me that the City of Edinburgh Council have no powers to control what type of retail operation sets up for business on Princes Street. For too many years the street has been pandering to the lowest common denominator a.k.a. the polyester-clothed brigade.
This, in my view, is why the street is infested with 'sporting clothing' stores (the traditional attire of beer-gutted non-sporting types), Burger Kings and shops selling the modern social scourge of the mobile telephone. These people should be encouraged to gravitate to shopping malls closer to the peripheral estates where they will almost certainly feel far more at home.
I would support the council if it sought to change the legislation that prevents it from any real say in Princes Street retail operations.

9

"Scotty",

29/01/2007 13:59:28

Hear, Hear numbers 4, 5, 2 - well all of the above! The council needs to stop pandering to the cheap shops, etc now on Princes Street. This street has a view in a million with trash shops paying horribly high rents and WAY too much litter thanks to the hamburger chains. Reduce the rents and get some class back on that street (beats me that Edinburgh is a World Cultural and Natural Heritage choice with the north side of Princes Street so awful, and that city is my beloved home city).


 

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