Edinburgh’s first new concert hall for a century scaled down after legal wrangle
● Auditorium’s capacity reduced and studio ditched
Edinburgh’s first new purpose-built concert venue for a century has been drastically scaled back in the wake of a bitter legal wrangle.
The capacity of the main auditorium has been cut and a second performance space dropped from the troubled development, which is earmarked for a site in the New Town.
Backers of the venue have admitted will “regrettably have to lose” several key aspects of the building when designs are revealed next year, adding that they are having to be drawn up within a “new set of parameters”.
Insiders said the concert hall’s capacity could be cut from 1,000 to as low as 850 in order to meet demands from a neighbouring developer to reduce the building’s height.
Other elements previously announced, which are no longer on the project’s website, include an all-day cafebar and rooms for educational workshops, rehearsals and recordings.
Impact Scotland’s concert hall, which is planned to be a major Edinburgh International Festival venue and a permanent home for the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, is now not due to open until 2025 – four years later than originally envisaged.
The reduction of the concert hall, which would be built off St Andrew Square, has emerged weeks after it was revealed that Sir Ewan Brown, the project’s figurehead, had stepped down.
The latest problems are a major setback for the venue, which had £25 million worth of support from the Scottish and UK governments and the city council, and will cost at least £75m.
Architects were forced to return to the drawing board in January after the charitable trust pursuing the project agreed to redesign the venue to resolve a dispute with the property firm behind the St James development.
It claimed that views from its luxury hotel would be blocked by the concert hall, which is being designed by award-winning British architect Sir David Chipperfield. Councillors approved his vision in April 2019, three years after the venue was announced.
However, it ran into trouble last summer when it emerged that Nuveen Real Estate was seeking a judicial review. It only agreed to drop the legal challenge on the basis that it was “substantially reduced”.
Last year it emerged that Carol Grigor, the American arts philanthropist bankrolling the project, had upped her contribution to £35m. The new cost is not expected to be known until next year.
Impact Scotland said: “Creating a world-class concert hall with the very best acoustics and audience experience, in a location accessible to all, continue to be the goals of this project.
“The design is currently at a very early stage and we look forward to consulting stakeholders as it develops and publicising it in advance of going to planning early next year.
“We are still considering several design iterations, all of which keep the hall’s maximum capacity as close to 1,000 as is possible.
“To do this and meet the requirement to reduce the size of the whole building means we will regrettably have to lose other aspects of the building, principally the studio. Ultimately we believe we can still fulfil our core objective of making a major contribution to the future of music in Scotland.”
“To meet the requirement to reduce the size of the whole building means we will have to lose other aspects of the building, principally the studio”
IMPACT SCOTLAND