20mph speed limit?

article taken from the EEN 28th May 2014

Council unveils city Centre 20mph speed limit plan

Speed limits on city centre streets are to be cut to 20 mph in a major rollout of the council’s successful pilot project.

Detailed plans costing an estimated £2.5 million have been revealed by transport bosses.

Speed limits on most main roads in the city centre, Leith, Stockbridge, West End and Southside, will all be be cut to 20mph.

The proposals also show speed limits on main routes in the south and west dropping from 40mph to 30mph.

Corstorphine and Portobello High Streets will also see 20mph speed limits introduced.

The plans will now go out for public consultation and subject to approval will be implemented in September 2015.

Full article from EEN link

Some places you’d be lucky to reach 20mph, the cynic in me thinks they are trying to slow down all modes of transport so that the trams seems like a reasonable option 😉 but hell I’m just a cynical wee Bstard

No Edinburgh side in the premier league

Hibs were relegated Sunday, Hearts fate was already sealed before the season started with their 15 points deduction, so for the first time in 125 years there will be no Edinburgh side competing in the Scottish premier league.  Interestingly if it were not for Hearts points deduction they would have survived.

I know who I want to come back first, but then again I’m biased here 😉

 

Murrayfield to be renamed in BT deal

From The Evening news

Murrayfield Stadium is set to be renamed in a money-spinning deal involving Scottish Rugby and telecommunications giants, BT.

A source close to the negotiations today confirmed that talks are at an advanced stage and it is further understood that the deal, expected to be over five years, could earn the cash-strapped rugby governing body a whopping £20 million.

Link May 15th 2014

 

Tram Fare

We have information regarding tram fares.

Adult:

£1.50 for City Zone travel (all stops excluding Edinburgh Airport)
£5.00 for Airport Zone travel (all stops)

Child aged 5-15:
£0.70 for City Zone travel (all stops excluding Edinburgh Airport)
£2.50 for Airport Zone travel (all stops)

So thats £1 more expensive than the Airlink bus, which will be running 24hours soon… Pfft!

The Great Exhibition

Get yourself down to the The Great Exhibition @ Surgeons’ Hall – History of Surgery Museum
as it closes on 18 May 2014 until Summer 2015.

Surgeons;’ Hall Museum will be closed for redevelopment from 18 May 2014 until Summer 2015.
On the 17th May 2014, we will be celebrating the Museum as it was and giving you the chance to create artworks and express your views about your favourite parts of the Museum.
Try your hand at architectural drawing, pathology modelling, forensic skull drawing and bookmaking. There will be a chance to display your artwork in the Museum for public vote, special guests will be appearing and the evening will end with a very special musical performance.
Entry and activities will be free-of-charge all day. Art classes are suitable for all ages and levels (under 12s should be accompanied to the art classes by an adult).

More info on their site link

Images reveal £850m redevelopment plans for St James Centre

From STV

Images have been released of a £850m redevelopment of the St James Centre in Edinburgh.

Work is due to begin on the site in 2015 to create retail space, office space, two hotels, digital theatre, restaurants and residential units.

The City of Edinburgh Council will contribute £61m to improve infrastructure and public space in the area.

It is expected that between 2015 and 2040, the project will create 2300 permanent jobs and contribute £25m to the Scottish economy.

Stv.com 29th April 2014

Edinburgh Trams Start Date

Today we were given a date for when the first trams will carry their first passenger, the date is 31st May 2014.  Three years on from when they were first originally meant to be in operation.  incidentally the titanic was launched on the 31st May, so one must presume that Edinburgh council does indeed have a  sense of humor.  One line York place to the Airport, at a cost of Three quarters of a billion pounds, Worth it? probably not, sure the money would have been better spent else where, but that’s just me right? …… pffft

Snippet from Evening news below May 02 2014

Edinburgh’s trams will start carrying paying passengers on May 31.

The first passenger-carrying tram will leave the Gyle at 5am and head to York Place.

It is understood the opening ceremony will be deliberately low-key given the much-maligned project’s overblown budget and missed deadlines.

Linky

Also see Leith tram extension hopes fade after funding snub

 

Edinburgh voted one of world’s top ten cities

Article original published in the Scotsman 6th February 2014

EDINBURGH has been named as one of the world’s top ten cities to visit in a poll of the readers of travel magazine Wanderlust.

Edinburgh is one of only three European destination to make the list of top cities from a total of over 700 nominations. The Scottish capital came in eighth in the rankings, with Bagan in Myanmar (Burma) coming top of the rankings.

Scotland itself was also a vote-winner, coming in at number nine in the Top Country rankings.

Wanderlust’s editor-in-chief Lyn Hughes said: “I’m not surprised to see Scotland make the Top 10 Country list. It shares many things with the winner, Namibia, such as superb landscapes, accessible wilderness, good infrastructure, wildlife, and a wide range of adventures.”

Full Article here

Edinburgh-Glasgow rivalry began over loaf of bread

This is an older article, published in the Scotsman January 31st 20113

Edinburgh-Glasgow rivalry may have began over a loaf of bread.

IT is one of the world’s most historic rivalries which has seen the inhabitants of Scotland’s two largest cities attempt to get a rise out of one another for as long as anyone can remember.

Now, an academic has sliced through the enmity between Edinburgh and Glasgow to reveal it may all have flared up courtesy of a row over bread.

Robert Crawford from the University of St Andrews has pinpointed a 17th-century row amongst bakers as one of the first documented altercations which pitted the great cities against one other.

The professor of modern Scottish literature discovered historic accounts of the half-baked rammy while researching his new book On Glasgow and Edinburgh.

it goes on ….

He said: “The famous, often misunderstood, rivalry between Glasgow and Edinburgh began over 300 years ago. One of the first recorded flare-ups happened in 1656, when the town council of Glasgow expressed concern at the bad quality of bread the local bakers were producing. Two bakers from Edinburgh offered an easy solution and also managed to one-up Glasgow – they would happily bake Glaswegians bread that met higher quality, Edinburgh standards. The gloves were off and the jousting between Edinburgh and Glasgow had begun.”

Full Article here
Scotsman January 31 2013