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Holyrood
Rd 1
529 x 768
74K |
Looking towards the foot of St Mary's
Street. This (almost) isolated building is of a typically Scottish
style of architecture. |
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Holyrood
Rd 3
1024 x 768
113K |
An eclectic jumble of surfaces and bits
of old and new construction. |
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Holyrood
Rd 5
1024 x 768
79K |
Almost a silhouette of Lochview Court
and Salisbury Crags. People are visible on the top of the crags and
on the Radical Road, a footpath reconstructed at the suggestion of
Walter Scott as a way of creating jobs. |
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Holyrood
Rd 6
1024 x 768
114K |
Looming gracefully over the hole-in-the-ground
that will one day be the Scottish Parliament, are these twin cranes. |
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Holyrood
Rd 7
1024 x 768
109K |
A close-up shows that the all-white
paint job (except for that red bit) is, indeed, immaculate. |
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Holyrood
Rd 8
1024 x 768
115K |
Taken from the entrance to the Dynamic
Earth exhibition, is this view to Calton Hill - a view soon to disappear. |
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Holyrood
Rd a
1024 x 768
114K |
Dynamic Earth's building is both supported
and tensioned by these tripod-like constructions. |
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Holyrood
Rd c
804 x 768
90K |
Another view of Calton Hill with the
Nelson Monument to the left, and the so-called National Monument aka
Edinburgh's Disgrace - to the right. |
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Some detail as seen from street level at Horse Wynd. Evidently
the stuck-on decorations represent curtains, according to the architect's
widow. |
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If this area was going to be wild, then why arrange its 'wildness'
in converging concrete curves? I can just imagine this Italian dude
drawing sweeping artistic curves on his drawing board... Maybe a
grassroots poll is called for: Should it be strimmed or mowed, weeded
manually or with chemicals etc. Should native plants be encouraged
and foreign invaders be weeded out? |