For a number of years I followed the gradual development of this former hospital site. Every few months I would watch the new high rise flats go up and at first I wasn't at all sure that I liked any of it. A couple of years on and I began to see what Sir Norman Foster had been getting at and I was hooked! The elegant old listed buildings are complemented beautifully by the new minimalist ones, each setting off the other. From the Meadows the spectacle is stunning with Jubilee Hall's red sandstone glowing in the evening sun.
One day I went into the marketing centre and asked if there were any one bedroom flats available. As it turned out, there were two and I inspected them. The dilemma was then which one? I settled for a duplex apartment in Jubilee Hall which is spacious and has a lovely view over the Meadows. The whole place is coming alive with restaurants and a gym and the place has a lovely tranquil feel about it although there is still the city bustle available at the Meadow Walk end.
I am in love with Quartermile and think that Edinburgh's reputation is much enhanced by it. My former school, George Heriot's, founded in 1628, is just across the road and both of my children were born in the Simpson Memorial Maternity Pavilion which, formerly nearby, is now demolished as it was of no architectural merit. Although I live in Nottingham, Quartemile draws me back to Edinburgh again and again. One day I may even retire there!
I've researched the history of Jubilee Hall which was built to commemorate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee in 1897 and which was officially opened by her daughter Beatrice, Princess Henry of Battenberg. It may be purchased as an illustrated brochure from: ag.dodds@ntlworld.com read more