The Scotsman

Bodies may have to be exhumed from ancient graveyard to make way for trams

- BY JAMES DELANEY

Up to 200 bodies may have to be exhumed from a 14thcentur­y graveyard in Leith if current plans to extend Edinburgh’s tram network down to Newhaven are given the final go-ahead, it has been revealed.

City of Edinburgh council have launched a six-week consultati­on process on the expansion of the controvers­ial tram line down Leith Walk, but under current proposals, an excavation of the burial ground at South Leith Parish Church would have to be undertaken before work can begin.

It is thought as many as 400 men, women and children were buried at the site on Constituti­on Street between the 14th and 17th centuries.

Workers at the “archaeolog­ically rich” site have previously uncovered historic findings. In 2008, tram workers digging in the area found a number of well-preserved human remains thought to be at least 200 years old.

Tentative plans put forward by the authority for the work – which will get under way in mid-2019 if approved in the autumn – also involve deconstruc­ting and completely rebuilding an A-listed, 18thcentur­y wall surroundin­g the graveyard.

The boundary of the burial site previously ran right across Constituti­on St before it was laid down in 1790, when the wall was erected to separate graves from the street level.

A council spokeswoma­n said, in the event of any excavation, the bodies would be carefully curated by the council along with their establishe­d collection of archaeolog­ical remains – including human remains from other digs within Edinburgh.

Part of the consultati­on is also set to include further discussion on potential financial

0 Plans to extend Edinburgh’s trams – the blue line in the map below – could hit traders in Leith Walk and would see bodies disinterre­d from an ancient graveyard reparation­s for businesses situated along the route of the tram works.

Plans for the expansion include closing three lanes of road to traffic on Leith Walk for up to 18 months while work is ongoing, but local traders were furious over a potential catastroph­ic drop in footfall for the area.

However, project director Rob Leech has suggested compensati­on in the form of rates relief or money from a set fund could be allocated to businesses as a means of offsetting a loss of income.

Mr Leech said: “There is a very direct impact to businesses on Leith Walk and Constituti­on Street and we are looking at some form of financial support to underpin that.”

He added: “There will be instances where, particular­ly with smaller businesses, there will probably need to be some sort of financial support and we certainly have not ruled that out at this stage.”

The council’s transport convener, Lesley Macinnes, said: “When the outline business case was approved in September, we pledged to establish mutually beneficial relationsh­ips with local residents and businesses who would be most affected by works.

“We’ve been working very closely with the local community and our partners ever since to model traffic management plans and look at options for supporting businesses as much as possible if the project goes ahead.”

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