The Edinburgh Reporter

Last orders for Dalriada in £2m home plan

- By Stephen Rafferty

An Edinburgh entreprene­ur is understood to be closing in on a deal to purchase the Dalriada Hotel on Portobello Promenade with the intention of converting the building into a luxury home.

The prominent hotel and bar had been marketed by Rettie

& Co for sale at offers of over £950,000. The popular venue will be transforme­d into a single private residence and with a likely investment of £500,000 required to upgrade the property, 77 Promenade could become Portobello’s first £2 million home.

The beachside Victorian villa attracted huge interest when it went on the market, with several serious bidders from the hospitalit­y industry looking to develop the site, and a number of private individual­s seeking a unique residence.

Billy Lowe, the successful bar and hotel operator who owns the Black Ivy, was said to be interested and planned to replicate the strategy which had turned his Brunstfiel­d Links venue in to one of Edinburgh’s most popular venues.

However, talks stalled and Mr Lowe pulled out of negotiatio­ns before the onset of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

For the last 16 years the Dalriada has been owned and run by Terry and Alison Magill and has been a popular venue for live folk music, jam sessions, comedy evenings and a firm favourite with families, locals and visitors enjoying the beach.

Rettie & Co's sales literature said that should a buyer want to restore the ground floor public areas and upper apartment in to one home it would create an “impressive and substantia­l family abode”.

A source told The Edinburgh Reporter: “The Dalriada was the setting for many local family celebratio­ns and a really popular music venue, but it appears it has served its last pint and held its last jam session. An Edinburgh businessma­n has snapped it up, and it is said he will spend a signficant sum to convert it in to one very impressive family home.”

The Dalriada is a B-listed Rogue Baronial villa dating from 1869 and was designed by Edinburgh architect James Campbell Walker for William Griffiths Esq.

Campbell’s architectu­ral career focussed mostly on schools, churches and poorhouses and his grander projects included Dunfermlin­e Carnegie Library and Hawick Town Hall.

In the 1880s the home, known as Beachborou­gh Villa, was owned by prominent Portobello businessma­n Robert Cooper, proprietor of Forth & Rosebank Bottlework­s at Baileyfiel­d, which in 1898 employed 180 men, 50 boys, and produced annually six million bottles.

In 1970 the villa was converted in to a hotel, trading as The Temple Hall Hotel, a possible reference to a belief that the original home was used as a place of worship, before changing its name to The Dalriada.

 ??  ?? Dalriada could become Portobello's first £2m home
Dalriada could become Portobello's first £2m home

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