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CHARLOTTE SQUARE, EDINBURGH |
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Essay by Julian Small. (1961-2002) |
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The vision of Provost George Drummond of the extension of the boundaries of the city of Edinburgh (the Royalty of Edinburgh) to include the land to the north of the city, and the construction of a new suburb beyond the Nor' Loch, on ground owned by the City authorities since 1716, was realised in 1766, with the advertisement of a competition for plans for a New Town for Edinburgh. In August of that year, it was announced that of the seven sets of plans submitted, the best was considered to be that prepared by James Craig, the twenty-one year old son of an Edinburgh merchant.1
How closely Craigs competition-winning design is reflected in
the version that was formally adopted in July 1767, and laid out soon
after, is unclear, since it is known that the competition plan was
considerably revised before its adoption.2
The plan which was ultimately laid out is relatively simple. There
are three principal east-west streets, the central one connecting two
formal squares each of which has a church on the side facing the
street entrance (and therefore facing each other along the length of
the central street), and the outer two of which are prolonged beyond
the lines of the two squares. These are connected by
cross-streets at regular intervals to give a grid-iron plan.
Because the New Town was envisaged as a purely residential area, the
fact that the central east-west street merely connects the two
squares and does not continue beyond them was not thought any
disadvantage. By the end of 1767, names had been assigned to
the streets and the two squares. The main street along the axis
of the New Town was named George Street, after the king, George III,
and the two squares which it connected were St Andrews Square
at the east end and St Georges Square at the west, in honour of
the patron saints of Scotland and England. Only later was it
decided to rename St Georges Square in honour of Queen
Charlotte, wife of George III. Thus, the name Charlotte Square
dates only from 1785.3
The disadvantage of the method of developing the New Town adopted by the City Council was that, with each house built separately, there was no overall control of the design process, and this resulted in monotonous and rather undistinguished street facades. Certain very general conditions covering the number of storeys and the height of buildings were enforced by the Council,5although even here some builders managed to evade them, but on the whole the proportions of the facades are very similar, although the details of the individual houses differ. However, at least one contemporary critic complained of the poor proportions of the buildings, likening them to a Barracks.6 Individual architects of the highest calibre designed specific buildings in the New Town: Robert Adam designed one house in Queen Street and a second house, Bellevue House, standing in its own grounds further north, and prepared designs for a number of others which were never built, and Sir William Chambers also designed houses in the New Town. However, throughout most of the New Town there is a lack of consistency in design between neighbouring houses.
The City Councillors seem to have considered that for Charlotte
Square, some special effort was required. It was always
expected that the two squares would turn out to be the most
fashionable addresses, and a decision seems to have been taken that
Charlotte Square would benefit from being the only part of
Craigs New Town to be designed as a single unified scheme.7
In 1787, Robert Kay, the architect of the buildings along South
Bridge, provided a design for the Square, and in 1790 another
was provided by James Nisbet.8
It was John Paterson, Clerk of Works for the new University
buildings, who in October 1790 encouraged Lord Provost Stirling
to seek a design from Adam.9
It was not long before opposition appeared amongst certain members of
the council, who feared that any design by Adam would turn out to be
too expensive to execute,10
the reason advanced for the rejection of his proposals for South
Bridge and for his terrace
of houses and shops for Leith Street. It is for this
reason that Adam was expected to provide designs "not much
ornamented but with an elegant Simplicity Such as the north frount of
the College." 11
Robert Adams designs for the College, as Edinburgh University
was known, are unusually plain, and its north facade is almost devoid
of ornament, and whilst this warning is not necessarily to be taken
at face value - Adam certainly does not seem to have taken it
literally - the designs he provided are sufficiently restrained that
the council did not believe that they would be drawn into
unreasonable expense. Nevertheless, in late March 1791
Paterson, in one of his regular letters to Adam, warned: "The
Provost does not mean that you should make plans of the houses, only
A plan of the frount wall of them Showing the doors and windows."12
The drawings which Adam prepared14
consist of elevations of the north, west and east sides of the
Square, each of which has a plan of the wall at the foot of the
drawing, showing the division of the block into separate houses.
The south side of the Square was intended to mirror exactly the
north side, whereas between the east and west sides, although they
are broadly similar, there are distinct differences. In
addition, Adam showed, as part of the elevation of the west side of
the Square, the facade of a church, and also
produced plans for it at floor level and gallery level.15
The church was flanked by two terraced ranges, and similarly, on the
east side of the Square are two terraced ranges flanking the opening
into George Street. Each of these four blocks, like the single
blocks on the north and south sides of the Square, is designed to
appear as an urban palace. It was this combination of the
houses of a terrace into a unified block which had been pioneered in
Bath during the 1720s by the architect John Wood the Elder,16
and which Robert Adam was also considered by his contemporaries as
particularly skilful at managing.17
Adams designs for Charlotte Square proved to be immensely
influential in Edinburgh. In 1802, the ground to the north of
Queen Street Gardens was laid out as an
extension to the New Town, the second or Northern New Town.24
This was planned by Robert Reid and William Sibbald, and
throughout it, each block is treated as a single architectural
composition, in the same fashion as Charlotte Square. From this
date, most such large-scale developments in Edinburgh took their
inspiration from Adams Charlotte Square facades and were
designed as palace-frontages. Charlotte Square was in this
respect probably Robert Adams most influential contribution to
Georgian Edinburgh. |
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