Stockbridge, Edinburgh
Posted in Architecture, Art Deco, Bridges, Edinburgh, Woolworths at 19:29 on 15 July 2010
Last week the good lady and I took another stroll along the Water of Leith.
No herons this time, and we didn’t tarry by Dean Village, the Dene Bridge nor St Bernards Well but since the last time we were there, there have been a few additions to the water in the shape of Antony Gormley sculptures. This is the one nearest Stockbridge.
Gormley is most famous for the Angel Of The North but has also placed figures on Crosby Beach near Liverpool and on roofs in New York and London.
The Water of Leith seems an appropriate location for these new emplacements as it flows past the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, albeit out of sight in a valley.
We had a look around Stockbridge, the good lady loading up on books from the charity shops and a great second-hand book shop that we hadn’t gone into before.
I liked the look of this one as the facade is Decoish:-
I suspect the projecting frontage may have started life as a bank.
There is some nice detailing on the door surround too.
On its left as you look at it in the photo stands the former Woolworths shop (which wasn’t ever Art Deco) and is now a Scotmid.
On the way back I photographed the bridge which carries Belford Road over the river.
I’ve no idea whether this is one of Thomas Telford’s (as the Dene Bridge is) but it looks of an age to me.
This is the detail up on the right in close up:-
I believe it depicts the Arms of Edinburgh.