The Scotsman

Edinburgh bus station under threat as owners plan to end lease

- Donald Turvill scotsman.com

future of Edinburgh Bus Station is hanging in the balance as its owners could attempt to redevelop the city centre site, it is understood.

The city council has been told its lease of the station in St Andrew Square will not be renewed beyond 2027 and currently has no replacemen­t identified, according to sources.

Transport convener Scott Arthur said be was “disappoint­ed that such a modern and wellused piece of Edinburgh’s sustainabl­e transport infrastruc­ture may be lost”. Mr Arthur said officials were “currently considerin­g options which will be presented to and considered by committee at a future date”.

It is understood bus station owners Coal Pension Properties, which manages property investment­s for a coal industry workers’ pension scheme, does not intend to continue leasing the site when its current arrangemen­t with the local authority runs out in 2027, amid hopes to turn it into a residentia­l developmen­t.

Edinburgh Bus Users Group (EBUG) accused the firm of trying to “throw buses out” of the city.

With no obvious alternativ­e location to take the place of the existing bus station, one solution being considered by the council is to use Ingliston Park and Ride. However it is understood this would only be an interim option and officials are already exploring potential sites close to

the city centre.

Edinburgh Council’s 2023 public transport action plan highlighte­d a need to “consider future options for the bus station”. It said by the end of 2030 it was hoped the authority would “retain [the] bus station or move to alternativ­e location”.

Options include “potential redevelopm­ent” or using a compulsory purchase order to buy the site – however, this route is rarely used by councils as the process is complex and not always guaranteed to bring success.

A spokespers­on for EBUG said: “Buses go from Edinthe burgh bus station almost all over Scotland, and further afield, so it’s very worrying to hear it is under threat. It’s not the grandest of its type, but what’s important is whether it does the job – which it does, much better than some.

“We don’t know of a suitable site anywhere else in the city centre that’s likely to be affordable. And any suggestion of an out-of centre site with some yet-to-be imagined way of transferri­ng passengers to their final destinatio­n is, frankly, poppycock.

“A bus station isn’t like an airport. Anyone seriously thinking of redevelopi­ng the bus station needs to answer the question of just how the city, including this site, is to function, if they’ve squeezed public transport out of every key space.”

EBUG added: “It’s been a bad year for bus passengers so far. First the Scottish Government froze Bus Partnershi­p Funding again, leaving no clear pathway to improve services. Then it cut climate targets, promising only an integrated ticketing scheme which it first launched 12 years ago.

“And now the owner of the bus station site seems to want to throw buses out.”

Coal Pension Properties was contacted for comment.

 ?? PICTURE: PHIL WILKINSON ?? Edinburgh Bus Station at St Andrew Square may have to close because the owners want to develop the site
PICTURE: PHIL WILKINSON Edinburgh Bus Station at St Andrew Square may have to close because the owners want to develop the site

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