NEWS
Hoskins' plans to convert listed Edinburgh building into Rosewood hotel thwarted
POSTED 18 Dec 2015 . BY Kim Megson
Hoskins designed the proposed new hotel wings to blend with their surroundings. Credit: Rosewood Hotels
Plans to turn Edinburgh’s neoclassical Old Royal High School into a luxury hotel have been refused by the city council.

Developers Duddingston House Properties and Urbanist Hotels had proposed a £75m (US$115m, €102m) project to restore and convert the listed 1820s property – which has stood vacant for almost 50 years on Edinburgh’s Calton Hill – into a 147-bedroom Rosewood hotel featuring two newly-constructed landscaped wings.

A spa, fitness centre, indoor swimming pool, three restaurants and bars and a ballroom were all planned for the complex, designed by Hoskins Architects.

However, planning officers had advised the project be rejected due to the impact it would have on the city’s built heritage, and on 17 December the council voted 8-7 to accept this recommendation.

“This was a very difficult decision, and not one we took any pleasure in taking, but it came down to the scale of the development, which was ultimately too great,” said councillor Ian Perry, planning convener for the council.

“Our job is to make sure that any development in Edinburgh strikes a balance between protecting the city’s heritage and developing its economy. Committee members have agreed with planning officers’ recommendations that this application fails to do this, and have therefore refused to grant it.”

Hoskins Architects had made changes to the plans earlier this year in response to the concerns of heritage groups, and pledged the design would blend into the surrounding landscape while “reinforcing the building’s prominence as a key Edinburgh landmark.”

Independent research from Oxford Economics has estimated that the hotel could have contributed £31.5m (US$48m, €42.3m)to Edinburgh’s GDP and £36.7m (US$56m, €50m) to Scotland’s economy on an annual basis.

Other Edinburgh development projects have caused contention of late, with heritage groups criticising a planned £850m (US$1.3bn, €1.2bn) scheme in the city’s St James Quarter, which includes the five-star ‘ribbon’ hotel designed by architects Jestico + Whiles.

Hoskins Architects had made changes to their initial design earlier this year in response to the concerns of heritage groups Credit: Rosewood Hotels
PROJECT PROFILE:

Rosewood Edinburgh
Hoskins Architects will design a new Rosewood hotel at Edinburgh's former Royal High School, a historic landmark building on Calton Hill in the centre of the Scottish capital that has stood vacant for almost 50 years.


RELATED STORIES
  Hoskins to transform neoclassical, listed building into Rosewood Edinburgh


Hoskins Architects will design a new Rosewood hotel at Edinburgh's former Royal High School, a historic landmark building on Calton Hill in the centre of the Scottish capital that has stood vacant for almost 50 years.
  Jestico + Whiles given green light for controversial ‘ribbon hotel’ in Edinburgh


Jestico + Whiles have won planning permission for an egg-shaped hotel wrapped in bronze coils – the centrepiece of a major development in Edinburgh – despite planning officials urging councillors to reject the idea.
  Luxury Edinburgh hotel approved as part of redevelopment of World Heritage Site


Planning permission has been granted for a major mixed-use development in Edinburgh, UK, which will see a luxury hotel, 30 restaurants and a multi-screen cinema created.
  Gareth Hoskins Architects wins Scottish National Gallery redevelopment


The National Galleries of Scotland has announced that Gareth Hoskins Architects (GHA) has been appointed to oversee a major redevelopment project at the Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh.
 


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18 Dec 2015

Hoskins' plans to convert listed Edinburgh building into Rosewood hotel thwarted
BY Kim Megson

Hoskins designed the proposed new hotel wings to blend with their surroundings.

Hoskins designed the proposed new hotel wings to blend with their surroundings.
photo: Rosewood Hotels

Plans to turn Edinburgh’s neoclassical Old Royal High School into a luxury hotel have been refused by the city council.

Developers Duddingston House Properties and Urbanist Hotels had proposed a £75m (US$115m, €102m) project to restore and convert the listed 1820s property – which has stood vacant for almost 50 years on Edinburgh’s Calton Hill – into a 147-bedroom Rosewood hotel featuring two newly-constructed landscaped wings.

A spa, fitness centre, indoor swimming pool, three restaurants and bars and a ballroom were all planned for the complex, designed by Hoskins Architects.

However, planning officers had advised the project be rejected due to the impact it would have on the city’s built heritage, and on 17 December the council voted 8-7 to accept this recommendation.

“This was a very difficult decision, and not one we took any pleasure in taking, but it came down to the scale of the development, which was ultimately too great,” said councillor Ian Perry, planning convener for the council.

“Our job is to make sure that any development in Edinburgh strikes a balance between protecting the city’s heritage and developing its economy. Committee members have agreed with planning officers’ recommendations that this application fails to do this, and have therefore refused to grant it.”

Hoskins Architects had made changes to the plans earlier this year in response to the concerns of heritage groups, and pledged the design would blend into the surrounding landscape while “reinforcing the building’s prominence as a key Edinburgh landmark.”

Independent research from Oxford Economics has estimated that the hotel could have contributed £31.5m (US$48m, €42.3m)to Edinburgh’s GDP and £36.7m (US$56m, €50m) to Scotland’s economy on an annual basis.

Other Edinburgh development projects have caused contention of late, with heritage groups criticising a planned £850m (US$1.3bn, €1.2bn) scheme in the city’s St James Quarter, which includes the five-star ‘ribbon’ hotel designed by architects Jestico + Whiles.




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