Stars out in support of Stockbridge stadium redevelopment

A squad of Scottish rugby stars has spoken out in favour of controversial plans to redevelop Edinburgh Accies ground at Raeburn Place. The players – including former Scotland captains Andy Irvine, David Sole, Jim Calder and Ross Ford – have written to The Scotsman to pledge their support for the £8 million redevelopment in Stockbridge, and follows the submission of a full planning application by Edinburgh Accies on Tuesday.

The letter says:

‘We are writing specifically as supporters of Scottish rugby, but more generally as ordinary people who passionately support lifelong participation in sport.

We wish to place on record our belief in the ­importance of preserving and improving the Edinburgh Academical Football Club (Accies) home and 
facilities at Raeburn Place in Stockbridge in Edinburgh. Over the years Accies has contributed more than 10 per cent of all Scottish international caps since hosting the first international match between Scotland and England in 1871.

The club is the home of and operates the Edinburgh BATS rugby club, which delivers to and supports rugby at four high schools and 16 primary schools in north Edinburgh. Last year BATS delivered 750 hours of rugby to 1,560 young people. With recent research showing that inactivity causes as many premature deaths as smoking, surely this youth work is something we should cherish rather than discard.

Through little fault of the club itself, the facilities at Raeburn Place consist of temporary units, hired at an onerous cost now met by Accies. This is simply not sustainable. The plans drawn up bring in rent from a maximum of nine shops, and will give 
Accies the best facilities in 
Scotland, run on a sustainable basis, in addition to ensuring the preservation of a valuable 
greenfield space.

With the inclusion of a rugby museum it will make Raeburn Place an attractive destination for families and others to visit. The retail element will enhance and complement Stockbridge’s existing offering. These are carefully drawn-up, high quality proposals. We hope that Edinburgh 
Accies will be encouraged to 
stay in their historic home,
and that Scotland can begin to close the gap with England in terms of rugby facilities and funding.’

David Sole, Andy Irvine, Scott Hastings, Roger Baird, Rob 
Wainwright, David 
Callam, Cameron 
Glasgow, David Milne, 
Stuart Moffat, John Frame, Jim Calder, Marcus Di Rollo, John Allan, Greig Laidlaw, Allan Jacobsen, Nick Deluca, Geoff Cross, David Denton, Ross Ford, Tom Brown, Tim Visser, Ben Cairns, Ross Rennie

However local opinion is divided over the proposed redevelopment. Campaign group Save Stockbridge organised a packed public meeting last month and have now attracted over 2500 signatures on petitions opposing the plans. The group says that it is ‘not anti-development, rather anti this development’ which they feel is too large for the area with a disproportionately large retail element that will have a detrimental effect on existing local traders.

In a statement on their website, Save Stockbridge said: “Our initial review of the submitted plans suggests that there is little, if any, substantial deviation from the proposal originally outlined during the pre-application consultation. We currently have a team urgently working through the fine details of the application so that we can provide a fuller analysis – as soon as this is completed, we will update our website with our findings and our recommendations of what to do next.”

The planning application can be found online on the city council’s planning portal – application reference number is 12/03567/FUL and the plans are also on display at Stockbridge Library. Comments on the proposals should be received by 9 November.

 

Stockbridge Library celebrates reopening

Stockbridge Library celebrated their reopening on Friday when they welcomed Macastory’s Ron Fairweather (pictured above),  who entertained visitors with lively Scottish stories and songs.

Stockbridge Library was forced to close in the smmer following flood damage and Friday’s event was an opportunity to say ‘thank you’ to all of the teams and partners who helped Stockbridge Library run its temporary service over the summer – not least Lifecare, who allowed the library service to deliver its service from their centre.

The library is now fully open and happy to welcome customers old and new!

Thanks to Kathy Softley for the information

Sign up for NENgage this Thursday

Tom Allan and Emily Dodd will be hosting the third NENgage social media workshop in Stockbridge Library on Thursday from 5.45 – 7.30pm. The theme of this week’s session is video-blogging – and there are still a few places available.

As ever, the session is free but you so need to register. To do so, or to find out more, go to:

http://nengage3.eventbrite.co.uk/

Last week’s session was a lot of fun, with a mixed group of Inverleith bloggers old and new taking part. Such was the participants’ enthusiasm – maybe some bloggers don’t get out much! – that the session overran, and was continued in The Antiquary (thanks for that splendid buffet, incidentally!)

We’re hoping to post some of the articles written by our ‘NENgagers’ on the blog soon, but meantime you can get involved – sign up for NENgage this Thursday!

NENgaging tonight?

Just a reminder that NENgage – the NEN’s programme of fun, informal Social Media workshops – continues in Stockbridge Library tonight at 5.45pm.

This is our second workshop, but you don’t have to have attended the first one as each session is independent of the others. There are a very limited number of places left for tonight’s session – An Introduction to Blogging – but you need to register if you plan to attend! Please go to:

http://nengage2.eventbrite.co.uk/

Tom, Lucy and I look forward to meeting you all tonight, and thanks again to Inverleith Neighbourhood Partnership for supporting this initiative.

Locals learn the art of Blogging

Well last night I went along to our first NENgage session at Stockbridge Library. On approach to the session I was excited but also a little nervous. I was worried that local people who had booked onto the session wouldn’t turn up and we would be left with just a few of us.

I arrived just in time to watch Tom run through his presentation with Emily and then the participants started to arrive.

I was delighted when local residents and staff from local projects started turning up and very quickly the room was full and everyone who registered had turned up.

Participants taking part in the first NENgage session. (Picture: Thomas Brown)

Tom and Emily started their training session and before we knew it was time for the participants to have a go at writing a Blog.

Everyone really enjoyed the training session and then we retired to a nearby watering hole who had agreed to put on a buffet for us. This was a perfect time for people to chat and share tales. For me it was an opportunity to catch up with former NEN board member Tina who attended the training.

Thanks to everyone who came along and we look forward to seeing at the next training session.

Share your story – join NEN’s social media workshops

Would you like to use social media like Facebook, Twitter and blogging but don’t know where to start? Or maybe you know a little but would like to know more? Wahtever your level of knowledge, help is at hand – starting later this month, NEN is running a series of five informal social media workshops at Stockbridge Library. The sessions are informal, fun and they’re FREE!

Funded by Inverleith Neighbourhood Partnership’s Community Grants Fund and hosted by the NEN, new media experts Tom Allan and Emily Dodd will lead the workshops and help you find your way through the multimedia maze at your own pace.

It’s an exciting new initiative for NEN, offering local people the opportunity to learn new ways to communicate and how to share their stories with the wider community.

The first workshop, ‘Share Your Story – an introduction to Blogging’, takes place on Thursday 30 August from 5.45 – 7.30pm and subsequent sessions will focus on topics like safety and security, video blogging, the joy of stats and how to build an online community.

Interested? To find out more or to sign up visit http://nengage1.eventbrite.co.uk/

All sessions are free, but register early to avoid disappointment!

 

 

Share your story – join NEN's social media workshops

Would you like to use social media like Facebook, Twitter and blogging but don’t know where to start? Or maybe you know a little but would like to know more? Wahtever your level of knowledge, help is at hand – starting later this month, NEN is running a series of five informal social media workshops at Stockbridge Library. The sessions are informal, fun and they’re FREE!

Funded by Inverleith Neighbourhood Partnership’s Community Grants Fund and hosted by the NEN, new media experts Tom Allan and Emily Dodd will lead the workshops and help you find your way through the multimedia maze at your own pace.

It’s an exciting new initiative for NEN, offering local people the opportunity to learn new ways to communicate and how to share their stories with the wider community.

The first workshop, ‘Share Your Story – an introduction to Blogging’, takes place on Thursday 30 August from 5.45 – 7.30pm and subsequent sessions will focus on topics like safety and security, video blogging, the joy of stats and how to build an online community.

Interested? To find out more or to sign up visit http://nengage1.eventbrite.co.uk/

All sessions are free, but register early to avoid disappointment!

 

 

Make your own Olympic mascot mobile in Stockbridge!

Excited yet? The London Olympics are only two weeks away, and to help get the children in the Olympic mood Stockbridge Library is holding workshops where the little dears can make their very own Olympic mascot mobile!

With Stockbridge Library still closed, the workshops – for children aged five upwards – will be be held in LifeCare’s Stockbridge House in Cheyne Street from 2.30 – 3.30pm on Tuesday (17 July). No need to book.