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Adam Smith home left to market forces

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Published Date: 12 March 2008
IT IS the historic building where one of Scotland's greatest thinkers spent his last years.
Adam Smith, the celebrated philosopher and economist, lived with his mother in the house in a close off Edinburgh's Royal Mile for 12 years before his death in 1790.

But it is largely unknown that the Canongate building is where the "father of cap
italism" held court in later life – as it is hidden away off the tourist trail and in recent years has been used as a centre for troubled youngsters.

However, campaigners, who have fought for greater recognition of Kirkcaldy-born Smith, have been left dismayed after discovering that the city council has put the building on to the open market.

The council has been repeatedly urged to instigate plans to convert the property, built for the Earl of Panmure in 1691, into an "Adam Smith Museum" or study centre in his honour.

But the council has instead put the building, previously converted into a home for Canongate Boys' Club, up for sale with a £700,000 price-tag and will plough the proceeds into refurbishing a community centre.

Agents handling the sale say they are expecting significant demand for the building, which they believe could be converted to become offices or flats . But the prospect has horrified experts months before Smith's long-awaited statue is due to be unveiled on the Royal Mile.

The veteran campaigner Professor Sir Alan Peacock said: "It's a disgrace that the council has agreed to dispose of a building as significant as this. It should be saved for the nation."

Dr Eamonn Butler, the director of the Adam Smith Institute, said: "We've thought about approaching the council about Panmure House in the past to see what we could do. I doubt we'd be able to bid for it."

However, a spokeswoman for the council, which used to run a social work centre in the building, said: "Many of Edinburgh's buildings have significant historical importance. So when considering the future of a building, we look at whether it's in its best interests to remain in public ownership or be sold."



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1

Navvy,

12/03/2008 02:56:24
Saved for a nation which has abandoned Adam Smith's teaching?

All we need do it to put up a plaque and list it to prevent demolition or undue change
2

WKKB,

12/03/2008 12:09:18
"But the council has instead put the building, previously converted into a home for Canongate Boys' Club, up for sale with a £700,000 price-tag and will plough the proceeds into refurbishing a community centre." Awwww... there's the real reason... £700,000 and just how much will it really cost to refurbish a community centre and why? It's always about the money with the council. It seems they're not interested in the importance of Adam Smith, who was not just a great philosopher but and ECONOMIST! Interesting rub there
3

Ard Righ,

The Rock Of Edinburgh 12/03/2008 12:53:56
The council is hardly "disposing" of the building, it is A-listed and will have to be repaired and renovated in traditional ways fitting the building and the area, which will mean getting rid of the horrible councilified apparel that they ruin so many period buildings with, just look at what was done to Moray House up the road!

Where was the "Wealth of Nations" written? Is this wonderful house reasonable to be used for a library for the history of economic theory? Why not?
A national resource, not a museum.
4

Jerad Reimers,

USA 12/03/2008 16:06:15
How intriguing that they would employ his own theories in order to provide for their city...I would love to cross the pond and visit it if it ever became a museum (or national resource). Its unfortunate that so many wonderful bits of history are lost to modernization.
5

Buttress,

12/03/2008 17:01:05
Flog it to Mountgrange so it can be demolished as part of the Caltongate dvelopment ... listed status seems not to matter any longer, if the price is right and a developer can argue it's for the 'economic' development' of the city...

www.ew8.org.uk

 

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