The Edinburgh Reporter

‘Catastroph­ic’ works damages hotel business

- By Donald Turvill Local Democracy Reporter

ONE OF THE capital’s top hotels said it could be forced to shut its restaurant due to the “catastroph­ic” impact repair work on the North Bridge is having on the businesses there.

The Scotsman Hotel, which is one of several traders reporting sharp downturns in takings as a result of the restricted access along the bridge, said it is “suffering from the poorest pedestrian/place experience in the city” at what would normally be the busiest time of year.

And with work now expected to drag on until 2025 – five years behind schedule – the hotel has told the city council its Grand Café is threatened with closure with staff redundanci­es possible.

Suzanne McIntosh from the Scotsman Group said: “Firstly, we had the refurbishm­ent and overall upgrade of the hotel which we carried out in phases to allow the hotel to continue to trade.

“Then obviously Covid. Now we have the ongoing works to North Bridge which continue to exacerbate our ability to trade normally.

“Before now we have been able to ‘manage’ the North Bridge works despite the works causing water leaks into lower levels including bedrooms.

Diesel fumes from generators have been located on Scotsman land under our plant areas and we have suffered from restricted access in and around the hotel.

“However, the impacts now being experience­d by the current works to the North Bridge are so significan­t that the hotel’s landmark ‘Grand Café’ is threatened with closure, potentiall­y resulting in redundancy for the staff.”

Extensive work to restore the 140-year old link between Edinburgh’s Old and New Towns began in 2018 and was supposed to last two years.

Delays have pushed the cost of repairs from £25million to £62million.

Earlier this year, it was confirmed the bridge may not fully reopen until 2025 after “previously concealed” issues were discovered in parts of the bridge not inspected since its constructi­on in the late 1800s.

Galab Singh, speaking on behalf of the Tron Area Business Group, said the impact on traders in the area is “enormous”, adding businesses’ income is down “40 to 90 per cent”.

He said: “2022 was meant to be a period of recovery for businesses, but for us it has become a three-year pandemic.”

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