Ramsay Garden

Ramsay Garden

Ramsay Garden seen from Princes Street
General information
Architectural style Scots Baronial
Location Castlehill
Town or city Edinburgh
Country Scotland
Construction started 1733, 1890
Completed 1893
Design and construction
Client Patrick Geddes
Architect Stewart Henbest Capper, Sydney Mitchell

Ramsay Garden (or Ramsay Gardens) is a block of sixteen private apartment buildings in the Castlehill area of Edinburgh, Scotland. They stand out for their red ashlar and white harled exteriors, and for their prominent position, most visible from Princes Street.

Developed into its current form between 1890 and 1893 by the biologist, botanist and urban planner Patrick Geddes, Ramsay Garden started out as Ramsay Lodge, a block of Georgian "garden homes" built by the poet and wig-maker Allan Ramsay the Elder in 1733.[1]

Contents

History

Geddes' work on Ramsay Garden began in the context of an urban renewal project that he had embarked on in Edinburgh’s Old Town. The area had fallen into disrepair, and Geddes hoped both to improve the living conditions of the working class, and to increase the number of wealthier residents. He was also involved in improving buildings for use as student accommodation. To these purposes Geddes rehabilitated a significant number of tenement buildings in slums along the Royal Mile,[2] including Abbey Cottages, Whitehorse Close and Riddle’s Court.[3]

The Ramsay Garden development also served these aims. It was partly financed by the prospective buyers of the apartments, and partly by 2000 pounds that Geddes's wife, Anna Morton, had inherited from her father. Geddes engaged the architect Stewart Henbest Capper to remodel Ramsay Lodge, and to build six large new flats onto it at right angles.[4] By this time Geddes had acquired a position at a university in London, but he continued to supervise the design of Ramsay Garden on his frequent trips to Edinburgh. The building work was overseen by Sydney Mitchell, who had taken over as architect, possibly due to Capper's poor health.[5] The result of the partnership was a combination of traditional Scottish domestic architecture and a rather fanciful proliferation of balconies, towers and eaves.[4] Geddes referred to Ramsay Garden in later years as the "seven-towered castle I built for my beloved".[6]

As a result of his own experiences in universities, and inspired by the better student facilities he had seen in Europe,[4] Geddes was also concerned with the provision of quality accommodation for students. By the time Ramsay Garden was being built he had already established other student Halls of Residence in partnership with the Town and Gown Association.[7] By the end of the nineteenth century he had managed to provide enough housing for more than 200 university students and staff.[8] The Halls of Residence were intended to be self-governing, with responsibility for drawing up house rules left to the students themselves.[2] The Ramsay Lodge section of the Ramsay Garden development was used for this purpose.[9] Murals painted by John Duncan on the walls of the dining and common rooms depicted images from Celtic myth and history.[10] Lectures and seminars were sometimes held on the premises.[11]

Other parts of Ramsay Garden were available to the public. The Geddes family lived in number 14, a twelve-room apartment on the fourth storey. By all accounts it was an impressive residence. The drawing-room was two rooms connected by an archway, with the whole measuring 20 by 40 feet. The sweeping views, which reached as far as the old Kingdom of Fife,[12] could be admired through the bay and turret window spaces at each end. This room was regularly used for large gatherings.[6] Frescoes by Charles Mackie graced the master bedroom.[13] The lease of the apartment was eventually sold to the Town and Gown Association due to Geddes's financial difficulties.[14] Although he later wished to repurchase it, his desire for the apartment to remain in the family was not fulfilled.[15]

Ramsay Lodge was the last of the University Halls to be sold off by the Town and Gown Association. When it was purchased in 1945 by the Commercial Bank of Scotland, it was a condition of sale that the murals be retained. The Bank went on to use the Lodge as a residential hostel and training centre.[16]

Present use

Ramsay Garden is now considered a desirable, though noisy, address. Some of the apartments are let out as holiday accommodation.[17] It is a minor feature in some guides to Edinburgh.

Notes

  1. ^ Kitchen 1975: 124, Lessware and Gibson 2006
  2. ^ a b Meller 1990: 76
  3. ^ Kitchen 1975: 119
  4. ^ a b c Kitchen 1975: 124
  5. ^ "11-12 Ramsay Garden, University Hall". Dictionary of Scottish Architects. 2008. http://www.scottisharchitects.org.uk/building_full.php?id=202231. Retrieved 2010-04-27. 
  6. ^ a b Mairet 1957: 74
  7. ^ Meller 1990: 76-7
  8. ^ Kitchen 1975: 131
  9. ^ Kitchen 1975: 115-9
  10. ^ Boardman 1978: 149
  11. ^ Kitchen 1975: 146
  12. ^ Boardman 1978: 121
  13. ^ Boardman 1978: 123
  14. ^ Kitchen 1975: 254
  15. ^ Kitchen 1975: 277
  16. ^ Boardman 1978: 431-2
  17. ^ Lessware and Gibson 2006

References