1826 – Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh, Scotland
Originally constructed between 1824-26, the Royal Institution (as it was until 1911) was extended in the 1830s to create the building we see today.
Originally constructed between 1824-26, the Royal Institution (as it was until 1911) was extended in the 1830s to create the building we see today.
The Scott Monument was built between 1840-46 as a memorial to the writer Sir Walter Scott (1771 –
Constructed between 1855 and 1858 above and around three Georgian townhouses at 81, 82 and 83 Princes Street.
The most striking feature of this club building is the large bow window at the centre with a richly carved frieze,
Jenners on Princes Street is not just a large department store, it is an Edinburgh institution –
Still a hotel today although much butchered at street level. “This building occupies a prominent site in Princes-street.
Sumptuous railway hotel built at one end of Princes Street as the North British Hotel.
Magnificent Italian palazzo for an insurance company on Edinburgh’s Prince’s Street. With its strong ground floor rustication,