The Scotsman

Desmond Hodges OBE

Architect’s vision, dedication and charm helped the capital’s New Town to survive

- ALISON SHAW

n desmond Hodges Obe FrIaS FSa Scot, architect. born: 25 September, 1928, in dublin. died: 26 November, 2012 in Haddington, aged 84.

Afew years before Desmond Hodges arrived in edinburgh, the capital celebrated the bi-centennial of the New Town with an exhibition, 200 Summers in a City.

But the once-glorious Georgian architectu­re was by then in such a sad state of disrepair that the architect behind the show warned that, unless the area was protected, there was every prospect that in a century’s time a similar event would be called 100 Winters in a Wasteland.

Call it serendipit­y, fate or just good luck that brought Hodges to Scotland soon afterwards to take up the role that would make him one of the saviours of such an important architectu­ral gem and lead directly to its world Heritage site status.

Already experience­d in Georgian architectu­re, through his upbringing in Dublin and work in Belfast, in the early 1970s, he found himself in Ulster, at the height of The Troubles, where work was scarce.

And so he applied, though not really expecting to be successful, for the newly created post of director of the edinburgh New Town Conservati­on Committee (eNTCC). The outsider’s charm, vision and enthusiasm won the day and a new era in edinburgh’s architectu­ral history was about to unfold.

Born in Dublin, he was the son and grandson of clergymen and a descendant of one of the city’s 19th-century Lord Mayors, metalworke­r william Hodges.

He grew up walking daily through the Georgian streets and, when his father was appointed Bishop of Limerick, was educated as a boarder at St Columba’s, Rathfarnha­m. He went on, briefly, to study history at Trinity College, Dublin, but left university to take up an apprentice­ship at an architectu­ral practice owned by one of his father’s friends. The firm dealt with, among other things, the restoratio­n of 18th-century public buildings.

He qualified as a member of the Royal Institute of Architects of Ireland, moved north to join a firm in Belfast and later set up an office with a fellow architect. Hodges, whose significan­t works included

Court circular

the churches of the Annunciati­on and St Dorothea’s, Belfast, also set up home above the office with his wife Margaret after their marriage in 1965.

Meanwhile, in edinburgh, concern was growing, among a small number of conservati­onists, over the deteriorat­ion of the New Town, which then was not anything like as highly valued as it is today. Houses around St James’ Square were about to be demolished and the St James shopping centre and New St Andrew’s House built in their place. The so-called “tattered fringe”, of slum tenements in areas such as Stockbridg­e, was in a bad state of repair and a number of streets and historic buildings were at risk of demolition.

But by the early 1970s, attitudes were changing: Sir Robert Matthew was appointed conservati­on adviser to the secretary of state and he began to drive forward the idea of preserving the New Town. The findings of a condition survey of the area, which stressed the need for regular maintenanc­e, were presented to an internatio­nal conference in 1970 and by December that year the edinburgh New Town Conservati­on Committee, which included Sir Robert, was being establishe­d. The venture offered grants to property owners and expert advice on external repairs and Hodges became its first full-time director in 1972.

He had previously helped to found the Ulster Architectu­ral Heritage Society, where he had already honed his diplomatic skills, using hospitalit­y and charm, to disarm the opposition.

He enthusiast­ically continued this crucial charm offensive in edinburgh, where the New Town community, who required to be persuaded of his wisdom, encompasse­d many strata of society – not all of them with the funds required.

In the early days, one impoverish­ed tenant – an artist – funded his contributi­on to the conservati­on effort by painting and selling images of the New Town. The first completed project was at 23 fettes Row and was officially unveiled by the Queen Mother in 1975. Hodges oversaw a total of 1,233 repair projects between 1972 and his retiral in 1994. Today, the brown plaques which mark repaired buildings can still be seen throughout the New Town.

One of the biggest successes of got involved in the Canal Society. He was also a member of St John’s Church, served on the vestry, was in charge of the fabric and instituted the guardians or welcomers.

An Irishman with a twinkle and a certain unorthodox­y of approach, he also had a modesty that would no doubt have precluded him from agreeing that, along with a handful of others, he was one of the saviours of the New Town. That it looks as it does today – a splendid, thriving and desirable place – is his legacy.

He is survived his wife Margaret, daughters Penelope and Lucy and four grandchild­ren.

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