Thursday, 10 December 2009

12. Ramsay Gardens


Ramsay Gardens

The now iconic apartments at the top of Edinburgh’s Royal mile are another example of Geddes’ effort to bring his biological studies in reciprocal accommodation to a human environment. In this complex Geddes set up a flat for himself and flats for many other families as well as creating a Town and Gown hall of residence.

11. Castlehill School


Castlehill School

Geddes used the school to implement his innovative ideas of early learning and he often took the children out of class in the afternoon to work on his many garden projects throughout Edinburgh Old Town.

11. Mylne's Court

Mylne’s Court

In 1892 Geddes converted the two buildings to the north and south of the court in to Edinburgh’s very first self-governed student accommodation. Geddes’ vision for the accommodation was to create ‘a community of co-operative living for learning and intellectual interaction’. Anon, www.patrickgeddestrust.co.uk

10. Burn's Land

Burn’s Land

Unheard of at the time, Geddes collaborated with Henbest Capper to establish accommodation for the University of Edinburgh’s first female students.

9. James Court


James Court

Once married in 1886 Geddes took his new wife to live in a second floor flat of James Court. At the time the Old Town was widely considered a slum and a very bleak place to live. However carrying from Geddes’ early studies in reciprocal accommodation Geddes felt it was possible to create a pleasant residence in difficult situations. Geddes quickly convinced his neighbours to help improve their surroundings by painting, cleaning and planting.

8. Blackie House

Blackie House

As a part of the urban renewal program in 1894 Geddes created a new court, now called Wardrop’s court. To get air and light into the ‘slum’ like tenements Geddes had to smaller closes removed to achieve this and develop a better standard of living for the residents. Geddes converted the house to the north of the court in to morte self-governing student accommodation.

7. Riddle's Court



Riddle’s Court

Yet another example of a concerted effort to retain rather than demolish Geddes renovated two houses of the court and created a self-governing accommodation for students. Student housing was relatively uncommon at the time with only Oxford and Cambridge offering accommodation of any sort for students. Geddes’ influence is given pride of place in the court with his life motto, ‘Vivendo Discimus’ (By living we learn) inscribed on the round stione arch.

6. Lady Stair's Close

Lady Stair’s Close

In one of his earliest conservation efforts, Geddes persuaded the Fifth Earl of Rosebery to purchase the house and with the help of George S Aitken, a colleague of Geddes, they restored the dilapidated house.

5. Old Assembly Close


Old Assembly Close

As a town planner Geddes thought that vehicles shouldn’t govern the spaces within cities and towns and he decided that ‘pedestrian precincts’ should be established across cities. With the help of the City Engineer’s Department, Geddes created two squares within the tenement blocks of Old Assembly Close between the royal mile and the Cowgate. Again the two squares were intended to stimulate a sense of community. This effort to create ‘pedestrian precincts’ was later recognised by the Old Town Conservation and Renewal Trust with the creation of Hunter Square where traffic was previously a problem.

4. Chessel's Court


Chessel’s Court

Patrick Geddes improved the buildings of Chessel’s court as well as creating a series of garden spaces and children’s play areas in the communal land between the buildings.

3. Moray House


Moray House

Geddes also believed that where worthy, buildings should be preserved and Moray House is one of many examples of Geddes’ conservation work. Towards the end of the 19th century the building was in very poor condition and Geddes rescued it, giving it a new life as a Centre for Learning and Education.

2. Huntly House

Huntly House

In 1932 before Geddes’ death he and Frank Mears transformed three 16th century houses in the Canongate into a City Museum, a place for the public to learn about the city in which they lived and its history. The City Museum was devised to complement the Outlook Tower.

1. Dunbar's Close Garden


Dunbar’s Close Gardens

During Patrick Geddes’ time spent on Edinburgh’s Royal mile in the late 19th century he attempted to create spaces, which would stimulate a sense of community. The Garden is located in the Canongate area, which previously would have been densely populated with tenement buildings, housing for the local factory workers. Many of the tenements were demolished due to their neglected state and Geddes without waiting for government action created the Garden in their place. Although the Garden was recreated in the 1970’s the tranquil garden remains, hidden in behind the close away from the endless throbbing of Edinburgh’s Royal mile.

A Geddesian Journey to the Outlook Tower


Map of Edinburgh’s Royal Mile marking each of Geddes known projects from bottom to top:

1. Dunbar’s Close Garden 2. Huntly House 3. Moray House4. Chessel’s Court 5. Old Assembly Close 6. Lady Stair’s Close 7. Riddles Court 8. Blackie House 9. James Court 10. Mylnes Court 11. Castle Hill School 12. The Outlook Tower 13. Ramsay Gardens



Saturday, 5 December 2009

Reciprocal Accommodation

Reciprocal Accommodation

In his early studies as a biologist Geddes challenged Darwin’s theories of natural selection and made his own case for co-operative relationships and mutual living. In his examinations of algae living in flatworms Geddes discovered that the two could live more effectively simultaneously than they could separately. From this Geddes created the term ‘reciprocal accommodation’.

Patrick Geddes was at the forefront of an urban renewal program for the Old Town of Edinburgh in the late 19th century. Using his relationship with many of the prominent thinkers of the time, Geddes was able to initiate many conservation and rehabilitation projects across the Old Town of Edinburgh. The Outlook Tower at the top of Edinburgh’s Royal Mile is the most of enduring of these projects and remains one of Edinburgh’s most popular attractions.

Patrick Geddes' renewal program for Edinburgh's Royal Mile and Old town can be understood as an attempt to apply this natural example of mutual living to the social and built environment of humans.

Comparison can easily be drawn between Geddes’ projects along the Royal Mile and his studies of ‘Reciprocal Accommodation’.

Tuesday, 1 December 2009

The Outlook Tower, Edinburgh





Chronology of the Outlook Tower at Edinburgh

1856- Roof top terrace was open as a public observatory, complete with camera obscura. Owned at that time by Maria Short who moved the observatory from its original site on Calton Hill, Edinburgh in 1854.

1892- Geddes visit to Short's observatory with James Mavor. Geddes offers to purchase the tower and is accepted. (it is noted that he did not have a specific project or plan or the building, it must have been his fascination with the camera obscura that preempted the purchase).

The tower became the centre point for Geddes's socio-cultural scheme for the regeneration of the Old Town in Edinburgh.

Circa 1896- Financial difficulties slow progresss on Geddes's efforts and the Town and Gown Association is set up to manage funds.

1899- The observatory became known as the Outlook Tower

1904- Geddes submits a project for the Carnegie Foundation in Dunfermline, its principle building was to have been a Tower of Outlook.

1905- Geddes abandons work on the Outlook Tower at Shorts Observatory. The Outlook Tower Committee is set up to undertake some essential works and to complete the project.

To Current Date, the Outlook Tower is still open to the public, the lower floors of the tower house the 'world of illusion'