Though most attention falls on Edinburgh when the cultural cornucopia of the Festival and Fringe takes the place over in August, Scotland’s capital beguiles any time of year – even winter, when long nights underscore the hazy glow of antique lamps shimmering off its ancient stones, and eerie fog drifts in off the Forth. Plentiful urban chic adds energy to a cityscape of medieval alleys and sweeping Georgian crescents, sturdy hills and secretive nooks.
The stunning Edinburgh Castle is perched on one of the city’s impressive geological upswells overlooking Princes Street. Its oldest buildings date back to the 12th century, while its walls encase sights like the epic 16th-century great hall and Scottish crown jewels. The One O’Clock Gun also blasts from here (almost) every day, giving tourists who don’t know about it a bit of a jolt!
The city is dotted with outstanding galleries and museums too. See the National Gallery of Scotland halfway along Princes Street, and the Scottish National Portrait Gallery. Equally fine is the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art whose two halves face each other across sculpture-dotted parkland a 15-minute stroll from Princes Street.
Other contemporary art beacons back in the city centre include the Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh University’s Talbot Rice Gallery plus the Ingleby Gallery, housed in an atmospheric 1830s house. Add to these the leading photography showcase that is the Stills Gallery, while The Embassy Gallery draws on links to the highly regarded Edinburgh School of Art to provide an exciting showcase for super-fresh artistic talent.
A trip down to the shoreline gives you a chance to hunt inside Folly Antiques at the bottom of Leith Walk. Take a diversion off Leith Walk to the Leith Mills Shopping Village by the Water of Leith, on the first floor of Edinburgh Antique Centre.
For interesting independent outlets, see Broughton Street, Thistle Street and George Street, as well as Stafford and William Streets – all within a stone’s throw of Princes Street. Also check out Stockbridge – an enclave within 15 minutes’ walk of Princes Street just over the Water of Leith.
A clutch of art dealers are on Dundas Street, where you’ll also find the excellent Unicorn Antiques housed in a beautifully tiled former dairy and trading in eclectic vintage stock for over 50 years.
Edinburgh also has some wonderful green spaces. The 17th-century Royal Botanic Garden, locally known simply as The Botanics, has 70 bucolic acres of horticultural cosmopolitanism that includes the largest collection of Chinese plants outside Asia.
The Meadows is a trail-laced park just south of the city centre. Nearby you’ll also find characterful places for a drink – The Cloisters, fashioned from a Victorian parsonage – as well as one of Britain’s oldest and most atmospheric cinemas, the Cameo, dating back over a century.
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