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Andy Arthur @cocteautriplets
, 27 tweets, 9 min read Read on Twitter
Been talking about Sandport Street in Leith. From one direction, nothing has really changed at first glance #nowandthen
But from the other, everything has... #nowandthen (sorry about crummy perspective mash)
And it's been a while since "Tam's Bar" served those Wm. Younger Sparkling Ales
Another Leith #thenandnow view, a bit further up the road in North Leith, where Portland Place meets Lindsay Road was the block known as "Hamburgh Place", the 70s housing block now on the site still carries that name, but Davy's Bar is long forgotten
That photo is doubly interesting, as you can see the then brand new Cairngorm and Grampian houses, dubiously constructed pre-fabricated concrete tower blocks that quickly gathered a bad reputation (despite the fine views) and are even now a fading memory
Jumping south across the city,decaying factories mark the entrance to Dumbiedykes Road, a neighbourhood now transformed beyond recognition #nowandthen
Of all the slum clearances in Edinburgh, Dumbiedykes was the most "thorough", all that remains of the whole neighbourhood, once hoaching with people, is a single building, some setts in the streets, stairways seemingly to nowhere, gaps in old walls and what you can imagine
Along with old Leith (much of which was cleared in the 1920s) and Greenside, Dumbiedykes - just a 2 minute walk from Holyrood Palace - had the worst slum conditions in Edinburgh, buildings that had always been poor and were literally falling down around their residents
One infamous building in neighbouring St. Leonards was the "penny tenement", so called because it's owner tried to sell it to the Corporation and then an MP for a penny rather than face the cost of repairs.
In 1959, it fell down, still full of sleeping residents. Mercifully, nobody was seriously injured; concerned residents had called a councillor that evening who had recommended that they move themselves to the centre of the property for their own safety that night.
Oh, and those immense wooden buttresses? They had been propping up the gable end (removed of the original supporting structure) for years. My own mother was only 6 when this happened, but even as a child I remember seeing tenements with buttresses propping up the gable
The Penny Tenement was a watershed. The quick thinking councillor, Pat Rogan was a native of the district and campaigned for slum clearance and housing improvement in 50s Edinburgh. He did something about it as Housing Committee chair in the 60s scotsman.com/lifestyle/pat-…
Anyway, next time you're heading down Bowmont Place (as Beaumont Place is now known), have a wee stop and think what stoop on the spot of the rather utilitarian looking 1970s housing scheme that's there now #thenandnow
One of the most startling things about Dumbiedykes was the quite surreal steepness of the east-west streets flickr.com/photos/sixties…
flickr.com/photos/sixties… Look at this photo, and watch that stone bollard
Recognise those steps? Still there (one of the few bits of the whole district that remain)
And if you're wondering how the stone bollard got cut in half? Imagine what happens when the coal man forgot to tighten the handbrake on a street with a slope like that
There was significant inter-war slum clearance in Edinburgh, but many still remained. This map shows the large areas of "Corporation" housing (mainly small 3-storey tenements or cottage flats) built in the 1920s and 30s in green
And as the middle-classes also emptied out of the plusher tenements, we got suburban bungalow sprawl in orange (although despite the significant areas covered, it's low density housing so was for the relatively few and affluent)
It's worth noting that the green map just shows new-build schemes, there was significant clearing and re-building around the Grassmarket and St. Leonards
As best as I can easily make an educated guess, here's a map of post-war slum clearance in Leith, you can see it's concentrated around the Kirkgate, North Leith and Bonnington Road (note, does not include industrial clearance)
And here's the Southside and Greenside areas. I've coloured George Square and St. James Square blue, as to my mind those were development schemes ("progress") and not slum clearance.
With the High Street, I appreciate that nearly everything was rebuilt, but that would be a study in itself to see what was a renovation and what was reproduction
Back to some more #nowandthen shots. This is Glover and Ferrier Street in Leith, just off Gordon Street. Leith Central station had cut through the street and tenements in 1903, those must have been noisy flats! Everything apart from that stone wall is now gone.
And on the corner of Gordon Street and Glover Street, a whole street of abandoned and vandalised tenements
And looking at Gordon Street from Glover Street, the railway arches of the Caledonian Railway and the Mecca Bingo are still there, everything else swept away. Everything that is apart from the Young Leith Team, who are still doing the rounds... #YLT
Fashions, shops and transportation has changed on Restalrig Road, but not much else #nowandthen
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