The New Town Gardens are a collection of around 30 mostly private gardens and parks within the Edinburgh New Town Conservation Area spread across the New Town and the West End, listed as a heritage designation since March 2001. The gardens comprise a series of 18th and 19th century town gardens, squares and walks, established contemporaneously with the New Town of Edinburgh between 1767 and around 1850.

1. History

Most of the gardens were established contemporaneously to the New Town, and north West End of Edinburgh. Some have unique history such as the Hopetoun Crescent Gardens, which were the original site of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. The Queen Street Central gardens have a pond with an island, said to have inspired Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island.

1. Membership and access

Each garden has different rules concerning criteria for membership and access, with some permitting only those owning or renting surrounding properties a key, while others welcome applications from residents in other parts of the City of Edinburgh. Some gardens are regularly opened to the public, such as St Andrew Square, while others are only opened to the public on Doors Open Days or not at all.

1. Ownership and management

Each garden has a different management and ownership structure. Ownership is often by private shareholders or a joint ownership by the local residents. For example, East Queen Street Gardens are owned by shareholders who have explicitly bought a share in the land, and keys are rented to those who apply successfully for access, as a way of bringing in income to the garden. The gardens are then usually managed by Commissioners – around eight for each garden. The Commissioners are elected by the owners, and have responsibility for sourcing gardeners, and ensuring the gardens are well maintained. A Clerk of the gardens usually handles membership applications and entitlement. The Clerk will be a member of a local solicitors firm, with their contact details often on plaques on the gates to the gardens. Some of the gardens, such as Bellevue Crescent Gardens and Gayfield Square Gardens, are now owned and managed by City of Edinburgh Council.

1. List of gardens

Bellevue Crescent Gardens Charlotte Square Gardens Claremont Crescent Gardens Dean Gardens Douglas Crescent Gardens Drummond Place Garden Drumsheugh Gardens East Circus Place Garden Eglinton Crescent and Glencairn Crescent Gardens Gayfield Square Gardens Grosvenor Crescent and Lansdowne Crescent Gardens Hillside Crescent Gardens Hopetoun Crescent Gardens India Street Gardens Learmonth Gardens London Road Gardens Moray Feu Gardens Queen Street Central Gardens Queen Street Gardens East Queen Street Gardens West Randolph Crescent Garden Regent, Royal and Carlton Terrace Gardens Rothesay Terrace Gardens Royal Circus Gardens Rutland Square Garden Saxe-Coburg Place Gardens St Andrew Square Gardens St. Bernard's Crescent Garden

1. References
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Queen Street, Edinburgh

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Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh

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Assembly Rooms (Edinburgh)

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Lodge of Edinburgh (Mary's Chapel) No. 1

The Lodge of Edinburgh (Mary's Chapel), No.1, is a Masonic Lodge in Edinburgh, Scotland. It is designated number 1 on the Roll (list) of lodges of the Grand Lodge of Scotland, and as it possesses the oldest existing minute of any masonic lodge still operating (31 July 1599) and the first historical reference of a non-operative or speculative freemason being initiated as a member (1634), it is reputed to be the oldest Masonic Lodge not only in Scotland, but the world. It is often styled Mary's Chapel or The Ancient Lodge of Edinburgh Mary's Chapel, the former of which derives from its ancient origins, where it first met within the old chapel of St Mary's on Niddrie's Wynd in Edinburgh, which was demolished to make way for Edinburgh's South Bridge, which were completed in 1788. The lodge meets at 19 Hill Street, in the New Town, in a building erected in the 1820s. Designed by architect George Angus, it was built as a "Subscription Baths and Drawing Academy", and was purchased by the lodge in 1893. It is a category A listed building. The building is used as an arts venue during the Edinburgh Festival Fringe each August, when it is known as the Hill Street Theatre. It is the longest-standing continuously operating Fringe venue, and was operated for over twenty years by Universal Arts, but is now operated by Edinburgh Little Theatre.