Edinburgh’s Cockburn Association ready for another 150 years of campaigning

The Cockburn Association, Edinburgh’s oldest conservation body, yesterday celebrated its 150th anniversary in Edinburgh’s City Chambers. 

In celebratory mood, a diverse mix of the charity’s members and supporters from civic society, academia and business gathered to champion its achievements over a long history of campaigning. 

Edinburgh could well have been criss-crossed by inner city motorways, had it not been for the efforts of the Cockburn Association, according to the opening address by the The Rt. Honourable Lord Provost, and Lord Lieutenant of the City of Edinburgh, Councillor Robert Aldridge.  

Lord Provost Robert Aldridge, said: “Over the last 15 decades, the Cockburn Association has played an important role in shaping public policy and in protecting and enhancing our ancient built and natural heritage.

“On behalf of the city I would like to congratulate and thank the Cockburn Association for 150 years of achievements, a milestone that stands is testament to the continuing commitment, enthusiasm, and talent of all of those involved at all levels of the organisation. As we celebrate this anniversary,  we can also look forward with confidence, knowing the Association will continue its work.”

The Association’s Chair, Dr Lesley Martin, compering the event, revealed how the Association’s namesake, Lord Henry Cockburn, had written a famous – or infamous – letter to the then Lord Provost in 1849.

It expressed concern about the planned “monstrosities” that would irreparably damage the city’s “beauty and amenity”. Dr Martin went on to emphasise that the role of the modern Association was to fulfil the charity’s civic function, bringing together diverse interests in productive conversations. 

Chair, Lesley Martin, elected in May this year said: “In fulfilling our role as Edinburgh’s civic trust, the Cockburn Association must aim to include as wide a range of voices as possible and to try to ensure that the quieter, less powerful voices are heard, and listened to”.

The Association’s long history has seen successive waves of modernisation, most recently its wooing of younger trustees and volunteers and the appointment of the current all-female leadership team for the first time in its history.

The Association’s Director Rowan Brown, lauded the role of volunteers and their role in the Association’s success. She said: “Edinburgh has been shaped by ordinary citizens willing to stand up for its built and natural heritage, access to green spaces, dramatic beauty and unique identity.

“As we celebrate our 150th year, our book Campaigning for Edinburgh honours that legacy, illustrates the Edinburgh that might have been and challenges us to think boldly about the city we want to create for future generations.”

“The Cockburn has been built on civic action for civic good, and there are few better examples than the monumental collective seventy year contribution of the Association’s Archival Volunteer Team – Ann Stark, Ruby Dickson, Alan, Margaret Jessop, Lexi Christian and Doreen Parker – who have protected, catalogued, researched and shared the contents of the Cockburn Association’s vast archive.”

Dr Martin ended by putting the charity’s success down to its unique breadth of interests, its focus on “pragmatic solutions” its people, and its streadfast devotion to campaigning for a better future for Edinburgh.

Princes Street at a Crossroads

Heritage, vision and the future of Edinburgh’s grand boulevard

Princes Street has long occupied an uneasy place in Edinburgh’s civic life: simultaneously its most recognisable address and one of its most contested (writes JAMES GARRY, COCKBURN ASSOCIATION).

Both our shop window and our common ground, it is the point at which the ordered confidence of the New Town meets the drama of the Old Town.

As is well documented, its magnificence was carefully curated,  and fiercely debated. From many vistas, Princes Street and Princes Street Gardens still retain their constructed beauty; from others, the street feels tired, fragmented and increasingly disconnected from the care and coherence that such a prominent civic space demands.

In recent months, that unease has sharpened. Vacant shopfronts, makeshift replacements, inconsistent materials and a creeping loss of identity have pushed Princes Street back into the spotlight once more.

The City of Edinburgh Council’s draft Princes Street and Waverley Valley Strategy was met with thoughtful but firm criticism from community councils and civic voices alike. The strategy was widely perceived as underpowered: incremental where ambition was required, procedural where leadership was needed.

Significantly, at the Planning Committee meeting on 12 November 2025, councillors formally requested that council officers convene an elected member / officer / stakeholder workshop, bringing together those with transport, culture, heritage and placemaking expertise so that a more ambitious and exciting strategy for Princes Street could be brought forward for approval.

This proposed convening has already been described in the press as a “summit”, following rejection of the existing strategy as insufficiently bold. The terminology matters less than the intent: this is an opportunity for genuine reset.

But it must not become another carefully managed procedural exercise. Princes Street does not need consultation for its own sake; it needs a bold, principled conversation that acknowledges the scale of the challenge and the opportunity before us.

This challenge is not unique to Edinburgh. Across the UK and Europe, the traditional high street model is buckling. The drift of big-name retail to enclosed malls and out-of-town centres, combined with online shopping and changing habits, has hollowed out historic cores. Some cities have responded with imagination and courage.

Others have relied on surface-level aesthetic improvements and marketing rhetoric, mistaking cosmetic change for meaningful renewal.

These pressures are not anecdotal but structural: research by Historic England and the UK Parliament highlights sustained long-term decline in traditional high-street retail, driven by changing consumer behaviour, the expansion of online commerce and rising operational costs, trends felt most acutely in historic city centres.

There are lessons to be drawn from elsewhere, and they are encouraging for proponents of local, ethical, sustainable, low-emission and bespoke urbanism.

York has rebalanced parts of its historic core through its Streets for People programme, prioritising pedestrian movement and smaller independent retailers in ways that reinforce place identity rather than dilute it.

Bath has used careful, phased public-realm investment to support its World Heritage setting, framing its centre as a place for lingering rather than simply passing through.

Bruges and Ghent have demonstrated, through people-first circulation strategies, how heritage streets can remain economically viable while reducing traffic dominance and strengthening civic life.

Vienna has quietly reimagined several of its central boulevards as dignified, coherent public environments that support everyday use as well as cultural richness.

London, despite its scale and complexity, offers particularly instructive examples grounded in formal policy and design evaluation.

Westminster City Council’s Covent Garden Public Realm Framework sets out a structured approach to balancing commercial vitality with pedestrian priority, heritage sensitivity and coherent materials, helping to reposition the area as a thriving mixed-use environment rather than a purely retail corridor.

Meanwhile, the Strand Aldwych scheme has transformed a former traffic-dominated gyratory into a generous pedestrian civic space, restoring historic connections between the Strand and Somerset House and creating substantial new areas of public realm.

These interventions demonstrate that historic streets can be reimagined as people-first civic environments without sacrificing architectural gravitas or cultural identity.

What these places share is not a single blueprint but a shared attitude: they treat their most historic streets as civic infrastructure, not merely commercial corridors. Retail remains part of the mix, but it no longer defines the entire purpose or identity of the space.

Princes Street has already begun, almost by necessity, to edge towards a more mixed future. The City of Edinburgh Council has itself acknowledged this transition, noting the shift from traditional retail towards a broader mix of hotel, leisure and experience-based uses as part of the wider “changing face” of the street.

Media commentary has likewise tracked the steady replacement of flagship retail with hotels and large-scale visitor destinations, reflecting both local pressures and national trends in retail restructuring.

While such evolution is not inherently negative, it risks becoming reactive and piecemeal if not anchored within a clearly articulated civic vision. The danger is not evolution itself, but drift.

For the Cockburn Association, this is a familiar and hard-won narrative. Princes Street and Princes Street Gardens have been central to our work for over 150 years. From early campaigns that expanded public access to the Gardens, to resistance against overbuilding, intrusive commercialisation and visual clutter, the consistent argument has been clear: these spaces are not commodities, but shared civic ground, and must be stewarded accordingly.

At this moment, the Cockburn Association, as Edinburgh’s Civic Trust, is uniquely positioned to help facilitate precisely the kind of workshop now being sought. With long institutional memory, independence from commercial interests and a track record of principled advocacy, the Association can provide a trusted platform for serious, solutions-focused dialogue. A workshop (or “summit”) convened or co-facilitated by the Cockburn would demonstrate that this is not simply another technical stage in policy development, but a genuinely civic exercise grounded in public interest, professional expertise and historical understanding.

The task now is not to resist change, but to ensure that it is guided by care, clarity and long-term vision. Poorly handled, Princes Street risks becoming a diluted stage set for transient retail cycles and short-term commercial expediency. With imagination and leadership, however, it could reassert itself as a coherent, distinctive and genuinely civic boulevard.

The Cockburn Association’s long record of principled intervention is explored in Campaigning for Edinburgh, which traces 150 years of advocacy, resistance and considered action. It demonstrates that the Association has never opposed change itself. What it has consistently challenged is lazy change. Change without memory. Change without craft. Change without respect.

Any credible vision for Princes Street must therefore begin with principle. The view matters. The Castle, the Old Town ridge, the Gardens and the open sky are not decorative extras; they are the street’s defining framework. Materials matter too. Paving, lighting, planting and seating must speak of coherence and dignity, not contribute to a fragmented collage of competing interventions.

Equally vital are inclusion and accessibility. Princes Street must feel welcoming and navigable for everyone: with generous seating, clear wayfinding, step-free routes and design that supports everyday use as well as major civic moments.

The vision must also respond to the climate emergency through reduced traffic dominance, prioritisation of walking and cycling, and climate-resilient design incorporating greenery, shade, permeable surfaces and sustainable drainage.

Streets that respond intelligently to environmental stress are not aspirational luxuries; they are future-critical necessities.

Edinburgh now has the opportunity to articulate a distinctly Scottish response to the high street question, rooted not in trend-following, but in stewardship. Not in glossy reinvention, but in thoughtful continuity. Princes Street should not be permitted to slide into generic urban sameness. It can remain both living and grounded; practical and poetic; evolving, yet unmistakably Edinburgh.

This is an important civic moment and it deserves seriousness as well as optimism. The Planning Committee’s request for a workshop, now popularly framed as a summit, should be seen not as a procedural footnote, but as a meaningful opening: a chance to reset ambition and reassert quality at the heart of decision-making.

Princes Street will change. That much is inevitable. The opportunity now lies in shaping how and with whom that change is guided.

With principled facilitation, inclusive dialogue and renewed civic confidence, Edinburgh can restore Princes Street as a place that reflects the city’s character, honours its history and meets the challenges of its future with integrity rather than compromise.

Edinburgh tram extension: Cockburn Association’s Consultation Response

Evidence remains insufficient to justify years of disruption

The Cockburn Association, Edinburgh’s oldest civic society, is dedicated to preserving and enhancing the city’s heritage, landscape, and quality of life. We welcome the opportunity to contribute to the City of Edinburgh Council’s consultation on the proposed tram extension, and we appreciate the constructive dialogue with the Future Trams Team throughout this process, as well as their commitment to public consultation.

The Cockburn Association remains committed to supporting a transport future that is sustainable, inclusive, affordable, efficient, and sensitive to Edinburgh’s unique historic environment.

As the City faces the challenges of the housing crisis and increasing congestion and works towards the laudable ambition of Net Zero by 2030, it is vital that any transport solution alleviates these pressures and complements the city’s existing asset base of spectacular heritage, civic amenities, existing transport networks and public green space.

As both a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and Scotland’s capital, Edinburgh deserves a bold vision for the future, and one which seeks to address the City’s challenges.

Though we understand that the Future Trams Team have undertaken much detailed work in preparation of this consultation, we consider that the evidence base is, as yet, insufficient to explain and justify why an investment of such magnitude, and the inevitable years of disruption to resident and commercial communities is the best option for the City.

Given the far-reaching and multigenerational impact of this development, we have sought the views of our members on the proposed tram extension. Of those who responded, respondents supported the general principle of extending Edinburgh’s transport network; however, concerns were expressed about the execution and governance of tram projects to date, with particular reference to the multiyear disruption on Leith Walk.

Any transport extension must be developed in close alignment with the City Mobility Plan, City Plan 2030, the Active Travel Action Plan, the 2030 Climate Strategy and the Local Place Plans. Together, these frameworks set out a shared vision for a sustainable, inclusive, and people-centred city, which capitalises on its historic and natural assets, and preserves and enhances them for future generations.

At this strategic stage, detailed design information, including street-level treatments, traffic management, pedestrian and cycling provision, and heritage impact assessments have yet to emerge. We therefore reserve detailed comment until these plans are available. Nonetheless, we emphasise that heritage, landscape quality, and local character must remain central to the design process.

We are aware of concerns about the capacity of South Bridge to carry modern trams and the need for independent assurance of its ability to accommodate such loads without risk to this Category A-listed structure within the World Heritage Site.

These issues reinforce the importance of thorough engineering and heritage assessments before finalising any proposed routes.

The Cockburn Association is committed to engaging constructively as the proposals develop. We offer our expertise in heritage, planning, and civic matters to help shape a transport system that enhances Edinburgh’s sustainability, accessibility, and distinctive sense of place.

We look forward to contributing to future stages of consultation and to continuing to advocate for a transport network that supports residents and local businesses while respecting the historic fabric of our city.

The Cockburn Association thanks the City of Edinburgh Council and the Future Trams Team for the opportunity to participate in this important consultation and welcomes further dialogue to ensure that future proposals deliver lasting benefits for Edinburgh’s people, heritage, and urban environment.

Want to know more?

Readers interested in exploring the Cockburn Association’s long-standing engagement with Edinburgh’s transport landscape in greater depth are encouraged to purchase our 150th Anniversary publication, Campaigning for Edinburgh.

This richly illustrated volume traces the Association’s historic role in shaping the city’s civic and infrastructural development, including its sustained involvement in debates around city-wide transport and urban mobility.

The publication is available to order here:

Stephen Jardine becomes President of the Cockburn Association

Broadcaster and journalist Stephen Jardine has been appointed as the new President of the Cockburn Association.

The Association celebrates its 150th anniversary later this year. Its inaugural meeting was held on 15 June 1875 and he becomes the 16th President in the Association’s long history.

Richard Price, interim Chair of the Association, said: “ We are thrilled to have Stephen join us as President.

“His passion for the city and his knowledge and enthusiasm will be of great benefit to the Association and to the wider city as well.”

Stephen Jardine said: “it is an absolute honour to take on the role of the President and I look forward to working with the Council of the Association to make the most of the 150th anniversary celebrations and what follows.

“On it’s 150th anniversary I’m honoured to become the new President of @thecockburn – Scotland’s oldest conservation conservation charity.

“I’m looking forward to working with the staff and members to help Edinburgh cherish and value what makes the city special.”

Information on the Association can be found at www.cockburnassociation.org.uk.

Responsible Tourism: Join the Debate

Join The Cockburn Association and panellists for an engaging afternoon discussion on tourism, sustainability and capacity in Edinburgh and beyond. An in-person and online event.

Here is the link for the IN-PERSON tickets https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/1000629258047…

And here is the link for the ONLINE tickets https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/1000640581917…

Cockburn Association: Manifesto for the City

As we head into the Local Council elections in May, the Cockburn Association has set out its “asks” of current and prospective councillors.

In doing so, we also set out key areas for policy and management to carry Edinburgh  forward post-Covid during the next administration between 2022-27.

Read and download our full manifesto by clicking here, then get in touch with the candidates in your ward and ask them if they will commit to the following:

The next five years will need to be about building a new, resilient future for the City.  Maintaining the quality of our streets, buildings and neighbourhoods should be at the forefront of governance priorities.

Professor Cliff Hague OBE, Chairperson of the Council of the Association commented: “We need to move from an exploitive linear economy to one that cherishes and reuses its built and natural environment and places community well-being at the heart of decision-making.”

The Cockburn discussed some of the ideas in this latest Manifesto for the City in greater detail in our recent publications Our Unique City (2019) and the revised version, Our Unique City: our future after coronavirus (2020).

Holyrood Election – Five Calls from the Cockburn Association

Five questions for prospective local candidates in the upcoming Scottish Parliamentary election

For almost 150 years the Cockburn Association has campaigned to preserve, protect and promote the built heritage, natural environment and civic amenity of Edinburgh and its surrounding area.

Our passion has been backed by an array of professional expertise. The city we cherish today, with its dramatic skyline and World Heritage Site rather than motorway interchanges, owes much to those efforts.

However, recent years witnessed pressures as Edinburgh has increasingly become the main dynamo of the Scottish economy, at the same time as Holyrood and the City Council have set ambitious net zero carbon targets. 

In addition there are the challenges presented by Covid, which has highlighted the importance of freely accessible, good quality parks and other public space for health and wellbeing, as well as the need to tackle inequalities.

The Cockburn Association believes that the climate emergency, public health and the legacy from pre-pandemic inequality meant that “rebuilding” should not mean resetting the clock to 2019.

In particular, we urge those seeking to represent Edinburgh’s citizens in the Parliament to recognise that many Edinburgh residents, particularly those living in the city centre, have been alarmed by the over tourism of the past few years.

Another decade like the last one will drastically change the character of the city, leaving it less resilient in the face of the next crisis.

Those elected to Holyrood will face intense lobbying by representatives of interests keen to reaffirm their free reign to use the city’s parks, open green spaces and residential blocks for their respective private commercial benefit, including the events, festivals and short-term letting industries.

We ask our representatives to ‘build back better’ rather than re-enact 2019. The Cockburn’s “Our Unique City” manifesto presents the case for the path the capital should take.

As local residents make a decision as to which candidate they will vote for, the Cockburn has five “asks” to put to each person who wishes to represent the city of Edinburgh constituencies or the Lothians region:

Will you stop the commodification and privatisation of Edinburgh’s cherished public places?

Access to public streets, parks and open spaces should always be free and unrestricted and the availability of open space for physical and mental wellbeing has never been so important as it is today. When events are permitted, infrastructure, such as physical and visual barriers, must be minimised and removed as quickly as possible.

Soft-surfaced spaces should never be used for events that require significant constructions. Continual replacement of turf and the damage to trees resulting from events is unsustainable, expensive and simply wrong. Commercial interests should not determine how public spaces are used.

Will you commit to the regulation of Short Term Lets in Edinburgh and their overall reduction, returning these homes to permanent residential use?

The last decade has seen an exponential growth in unregulated short-term-let accommodation.

This has hollowed out the city centre, displacing permanent residents and replacing them with holiday guests and party flats. This trend must be reversed with clear and unequivocal regulation implemented urgently. The unsustainable number of current short term lets needs to be reversed, with significantly enhanced enforcement action.

Will you support better planning and building standards to improve the quality and amenity of new housing?

The global pandemic has illustrated the importance of quality spaces within the home and its immediate environs. More home working will require better minimum space standards to ensure healthy working habits.  Increased and innovative outdoor space in housing developments (both quantity and quality) would encourage greater well-being and active family environments. 

The UK has some of the smallest space standards for housing in Europe.  A return to the Parker Morris Standards of the 1960s (updated, of course) is required and a move beyond minimum standards for climate mitigation and carbon management.

Will you incentivise the maintenance and care of our traditional building stock by supporting the reduction of VAT on repairs to zero?

The most sustainable building is an existing building. In a city defined by its historic and traditional architecture, incurring VAT on maintenance and refurbishment costs is a significant financial burden. 

It results in less work for more money. It acts as a disincentive for homeowners to invest in the fabric of their homes, reducing sustainability and increasing fuel poverty.  The Cockburn first called for tax relief on heritage properties in 1935 and we do so again. 

Will you ensure that funding for tourism and events in Edinburgh results in direct support for local businesses and cultural organisations?

Edinburgh’s hospitality, service and cultural sector must be supported and championed, rather than face continued publicly subsidised and unfair competition from temporary ‘pop-up’ operators and event promoters, diverting much-needed trade away from struggling, long-established local businesses.

The Scottish Parliament regularly supports local community wealth-building initiatives elsewhere in Scotland, focused on micro rather than macro-economic recovery opportunities, this principle must also be applied in Edinburgh too, especially in the post-pandemic era.

We would be delighted if readers of this piece put one or more of these questions to their local Edinburgh constituency or Lothian List candidates.

Before going to the polls it is hugely important that you hear the thoughts of each prospective candidate on these vitally significant issues and receive a commitment to action each one during the next five years if successfully elected to the Scottish Parliament.

A full list of Edinburgh Constituency and Lothian List candidates can be found here.

Cockburn Association objects to Filmhouse Festival Square plans

The Cockburn Association has submitted its formal response to the @Filmhouse (Centre of Moving Image) planning application to build a new centre for film in Festival Square.

After ‘prolonged & careful consideration’, Edinburgh’s Civic Trust will be objecting to this proposal:

Whose Festival is it, anyway?

Rescheduled Cockburn Conversations event

we are hosting on Zoom the 2020 Cockburn Annual Lecture. Professor Cliff Hague, chairperson of the Cockburn Association, will give us a talk entitled “Whose Festival is it Anyway?” followed by an Q&A with the audience.

Focusing on what Edinburgh’s Festivals should look like in the future, Prof Hague will assess why the sheer scale of Edinburgh’s Festivals has become a source of controversy to many residents. He will also offer some suggestions how these events might become more citizen-friendly from 2021 onwards.

His talk will build on the “Our Unique City” manifesto produced by the Cockburn Association that outlines our vision for life in Edinburgh in a post-COVID era.

Tickets to the event are free to Cockburn Association members and by donation to non-members. Please book on our Eventbrite page here. Only ONE ticket per screen, per event is required to be booked.

If you enjoy our Cockburn Conversations and other events please do consider becoming a member of the Cockburn Association – The Edinburgh Civic Trust.

We are an independent conservation charity and we need your assistance to help us continue protecting Edinburgh’s wonderful civic amenities and unique built heritage.

Visit Edinburgh University this Doors Open Days weekend (virtually, of course!)

The University of Edinburgh is proud to be part of Edinburgh and East Lothian Doors Open Days, organised by the Cockburn Association. 

This year, due to the ongoing need for physical distancing, Doors Open Days will be online. We hope you enjoy learning about our buildings from the comfort of your home. 

Available virtual and video tours

Edinburgh Futures Institute – tour 

The King’s Buildings – website and tour

McEwan Hall – video

MRC Institute of Genetics & Molecular Medicine – behind the scenes tour

St Cecilia’s Hall – website and video

Talbot Rice Gallery – video 

The Anatomical Museum – video

The Bayes Centre – website and videos

School of Informatics – website and video tour

Easter Bush Campus – website and video tours

Edinburgh College of Art – virtual tour 

Institute for Regeneration and Repair, Centre for Regenerative Medicine – virtual tour 

George Square and Holyrood Campus – virtual tours of eleven buildings

The Edinburgh Doors Open Day 2020 gives you the chance to discover some of Edinburgh’s most unique and interesting buildings, which are normally closed to the public.

Across the weekend you can discover some fantastic sites across the city, completely free of charge and from the warmth of your own home – as this year’s event  goes digital!

Celebrating its 30th Anniversary this year,  this is  your chance to explore some of Edinburgh’s most important buildings virtually. Many venues will offer behind the scenes tours, talks or exhibitions to bring the history of these monumental buildings to life.

Read about all of these places and more on the Doors Open Days website