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  2. New Town, Edinburgh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Town,_Edinburgh

    Plan for the New Town by James Craig (1768) A design competition was held in January 1766 to find a suitably modern layout for the new suburb. It was won by 26-year-old James Craig, who, following the natural contours of the land, proposed a simple axial grid, with a principal thoroughfare along the ridge linking two garden squares.

  3. James Craig (architect) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Craig_(architect)

    The most significant building Craig designed and undertook in the Edinburgh New Town was Hall and Library of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh (1776–1781) on the south side of George Street, directly facing the later church of St Andrews and St George on the opposite side of the Street. In 1775 former College President Sir ...

  4. The Georgian House, Edinburgh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Georgian_House,_Edinburgh

    The Georgian House is an 18th-century townhouse situated at No. 7 Charlotte Square in the heart of the historic New Town of the city of Edinburgh, Scotland.It has been restored and furnished by the National Trust for Scotland, and is operated as a popular tourist attraction, with over 40,000 visitors annually.

  5. William Henry Playfair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Henry_Playfair

    Playfair's townhouse at 17 Great Stuart Street, Edinburgh Playfair's grave in Dean Cemetery, Edinburgh Statue of William Henry Playfair, Chambers Street, Edinburgh. William Henry Playfair FRSE (15 July 1790 – 19 March 1857) was a prominent Scottish architect in the 19th century who designed the Eastern, or Third, New Town and many of Edinburgh's neoclassical landmarks.

  6. Charlotte Square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlotte_Square

    Charlotte Square is a garden square in Edinburgh, Scotland, part of the New Town, designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The square is located at the west end of George Street and was intended to mirror St. Andrew Square in the east. The gardens, one of the collection of New Town Gardens, are private and not publicly accessible.

  7. List of Category A listed buildings in the New Town, Edinburgh

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Category_A_listed...

    The New Town is defined here as the area shown in light brown on the map to the right, with some small exceptions: to the north, a line along St. Stephen Street, Fettes Row, Royal Crescent, and Bellevue Crescent, then along East London Street; This includes Royal Crescent, Scotland Street and Bellevue Crescent, which are omitted from the map area

  8. Queen Street, Edinburgh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_Street,_Edinburgh

    From 1840 this was known as Queen Street Gardens, which form part the collection of New Town Gardens. [2] The street is planned as four terraces of equal length, originally all three storey and basement in form. Building began at the east end in 1769, one of the first being No 8 which was designed for Baron Orde by Robert Adam, completed in 1771.

  9. Melville Monument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melville_Monument

    The Edinburgh New Town Gardens. Birlinn ISBN 1-84158-402-9; Cockburn, Henry (1856). Memorial of his Time. (1979 ed.) The University of Chicago Press; Davis, David Brion (1975). The Problem of Slavery in the Age of Revolution: 1770–1823. (1999 ed.) Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195126716; Desmarest, Clarisse Godard (2018).

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