CityCyclingEdinburgh Forum » General Edinburgh

Art Deco Architecture in Edinburgh (Help Needed)

(221 posts)
  • Started 13 years ago by Wilmington's Cow
  • Latest reply from chdot

  1. Cyclingmollie
    Member

    Pity if it's gone. It was like having babies in a Poirot set (well not me, Mrs. Mollie).

    Posted 13 years ago #
  2. Arellcat
    Moderator

    Is the old Telford College building still standing? It was a magnificent bit of architecture.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  3. chdot
    Admin

    This is what you need to Google for

    http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=Simpson+Memorial+Maternity+Pavilion

    Posted 13 years ago #
  4. chdot
    Admin

    "Is the old Telford College building still standing?"

    Yes -

    http://citycyclingedinburgh.info/bbpress/topic.php?id=3297&replies=33#post-34450

    Posted 13 years ago #
  5. Arellcat
    Moderator

    Ah. I didn't know it had other names. :-/

    Posted 13 years ago #
  6. chdot
    Admin

    "I didn't know it had other names"

    Well you know it wasn't built as TC - you just didn't what it had been.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  7. tarmac jockey
    Member

    Some of the buildings at Pollock Halls are art deco. I think it is Holland House. Causewayside Garage Edinburgh

    From SCRAN
    1. Alfa Romeo Garage, Angle Park, Edinburgh - An Art Deco Garage built in the 1930s
    2. Whitefoord House, Royal Mile, Edinburgh - Art Deco doorpiece
    3. Sheriff Courthouse, Lawnmarket, Edinburgh - an Art Deco-influenced exaggeration of the flatness and weight of classical detail
    4. Episcopal Chapel of St George, York Place, Edinburgh - now a Casino
    5. Window breast panels for Lothian House, Edinburgh
    6. Poole's Roxy Cinema on Gorgie Road, Edinburgh, c. 1936
    7. Fountainbridge Public Library, Dundee Street/Murdoch Terrace, Edinburgh
    8. Scottish Co-operative Wholesale Society building, 78-80 George Street, Edinburgh, now the National Westminster Bank
    9. Leith Academy Secondary School, Duke Street, Leith, Edinburgh
    10. Morningside United Church, 'Holy Corner' crossroads, Colinton Road/Chamberlain Road/Morningside Road, Edinburgh
    11. Above lidl on Nicholson Street Edinburgh - old Coop Offices.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  8. Arellcat
    Moderator

    You might also want to check out King's Buildings as much of the site was built in the 1930s. Specifically, Engineering, Zoology, Geology and Chemistry.

    Another possible contender is St Ninian's RC School in Restalrig.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  9. chdot
    Admin

    "often a shame to find a grand cinema turned into a Bed Shed!"

    Had never realised.

    Happened to pass today -

    Posted 13 years ago #
  10. SRD
    Moderator

    not edinburgh, but can do pics, books and video on asmara, which has more art deco than pretty much anywhere else on earth.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  11. kaputnik
    Moderator

    Better a bed shed than flattened to make way for a shopping shed?

    Posted 13 years ago #
  12. kaputnik
    Moderator

    Just watched a documentary about the Orient Express. Fact of the day is that the term "art deco" was first used in 1966 in a Times article. Before that it was Jazz Modern or just plain Moderne.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  13. Arellcat
    Moderator

    For what it's worth, Glasgow Victoria Infirmary is an Art Deco tour de force. I'm not sure whether the new part is meant to be modelled on Coventry Cathedral's modernist themes or a 21st century take on Streamline Moderne.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  14. Well, I started yesterday. Not sure if these links will work, but... Started with Fountainbridge Library (which has a fab staircase just in the front door) and 116 Fountainbridge, a Telephone Exchange built in 1950, of which the builder, Stewart Sim, said, "The architect has expressed in a modern way both the function of the building, itself a modern service, and the dignity of a Government undertaking."


    Fountainbridge Library Front by blackpuddinonnabike, on Flickr


    Fountainbridge Library Sign by blackpuddinonnabike, on Flickr


    Fountainbridge Library Stairwell_1 by blackpuddinonnabike, on Flickr


    Fountainbridge Telephone Exchange by blackpuddinonnabike, on Flickr


    Fountainbridge Telephone Exchange 1950 by blackpuddinonnabike, on Flickr

    Posted 13 years ago #
  15. steveo
    Member

    Ah I never thought of those two as being Art Deco. Its not a style I'm terribly keen on but I think the style in my head is much more gaudy than those.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  16. kaputnik
    Moderator

    I'm a big fan of post-war modernist industrial buildings like the Telephone Exchanges.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  17. "Ah I never thought of those two as being Art Deco. Its not a style I'm terribly keen on but I think the style in my head is much more gaudy than those."

    Thinking more Art Nouveau?

    Posted 13 years ago #
  18. SRD
    Moderator

    I'm very fond of the Fountainbridge library bldg. It just doesn't seem to work in its location. And the inside is disastrous.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  19. Arellcat
    Moderator

    There are three other notable buildings in the inimitable 'deco style. One is the Fairmile Inn, next to the bypass at Lothianburn junction, one is 11 Easter Belmont Road, known as Lismhor, and the third is 46A Dick Place, which was built two years later by the business partner of the owner of Lismhor. Chapeau, Anth, if you can get photos of those two!

    Posted 13 years ago #
  20. kaputnik
    Moderator

    Mein Gott! Easter Belmont Road - had no idea it was there, it's fabulous!

    Posted 13 years ago #
  21. Claggy Cog
    Member

    Fantastic Anth, something I thought about doing about 30 years ago, photographing Art Deco buildings in Edinburgh. I also love art nouveau style with its waves and flourishes. The doors of the King's theatre...Perhaps you should read some of the literature from that time to give you a feel for the era too, Dorothy Parker, Ernest Hemingway, Saki. Film worth seeing, if you haven't already is Metropolis, Fritz Lang, that was made in 1927. There are all the great travel posters of that ilk too, for Cunard liners, trains, holidays in Britain, and of course, covers for magazines, particularly Vogue.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  22. Claggy Cog
    Member

    Oh, yes before I forget, The Dome, fabulous interior, on George Street, classic 30's. Quite a number of banks were built around that time. The RBS HQ on St Andrews Sq, may not be deco but definitely worth looking at, the ceiling is absolutely fantastic. Metropole on Clerk St I am pretty sure is deco. There is the golf club house (might be Musselburgh Golf Course) on the Esk Path, that's 30's.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  23. Hey Liz, there's a definite plan for immersion. I absolutely adore the advertising posters of the age (especially the Grand Prix posters - what I'd do for an original...).

    @Arellcat, thanks for those three. I'll be writing to the last two, and having a wander by the Fairmile Inn - I'd forgotten about that, best to see it before it falls down...

    Posted 13 years ago #
  24. p.s. this morning I was photographing Lothian House. Planning on trying to get inside that one - there's a swimming pool in the basement!

    Posted 13 years ago #
  25. kaputnik
    Moderator

    @Anth there's also some interesting looking blocks in the Royal Edinburgh Hospital that might be worth exploring. Look contemporary with the King's Buildings of that paeriod.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  26. Arellcat
    Moderator

    I had a look at the Fairmile Inn this morning and took some photos for the heck of it. Imagine the time when it was a stylish outpost in the middle of fields, leading to the modern suburbia of Greenbank and the Braids.

    I also had a look at St Raphael's Hospital, and although the form is still present, the windows have been renewed and detract somewhat from the barefaced style of its youth that Kaputnik mentioned. While I was in the area, I had a look around the cricket ground, but it's private. I think in winter you might glimpse 46A through the trees from Lovers Loan, but it's a pretty secluded area and I didn't want to appear nosy.

    Has anyone checked out George Watson's College? A lot the main building looks of that time, particularly the central block with its big square...things - I don't think they're stylised chimneys, nor lift machine rooms, and towers isn't the right word either. Worth a look though.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  27. kaputnik
    Moderator

    Garage at junction of Milton Road East and Eastfield. I seem to remember it used to have some sort of canopy around the lot out front.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  28. gembo
    Member

    Baird Hall on Sauchiehall Street in Glasgow - former hotel now Strathclyde Uni Hall of Residence would be the largest Art Deco residential building in Scotland (unless there is a bigger one0 - Wee pub across from it was good in early 1990s and went for an art deco theme [I am not dredging up its name but it was good]. GFT probably Art Deco too, just along a bit...

    Posted 13 years ago #
  29. kaputnik
    Moderator

    The abandoned lighthouse on the west breakwater at Western Harbour or Leith Docks. You can now easily get right up to the fencing, but it was being used as a gang hut and a rooftop special brew garden by western harbour young team, so I didn't go exploring too close with my nice new camera.

    Posted 13 years ago #
  30. Arellcat
    Moderator

    but it was being used as...

    Oh well, there goes history. Maybe it was better being inaccessible.

    In case Anth can get a cheap train ticket, Northumberland Street in Newcastle looks like it was built as though Art Deco was going out of fashion.

    I found some others this evening while poking around on Leith Walk. I did actually know about this one but had forgotten: the former office of the old tram depot on Leith Walk, now owned by tie. And there's the first floor frontage above Pizza Planet on Great Junction Street.

    But then, what about Methodist Central Hall, above the funeral directors, or the flats on Tinto Place, and the old snooker hall on Junction Bridge? Are they of that era too?

    We'll need a map with pins in it at this rate! :-D

    Posted 13 years ago #

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