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Ocean Terminal expansion plan shrinks



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Published Date: 11 July 2008
A MASSIVE expansion of Edinburgh's main waterfront shopping complex has been scaled back over fears of the damage it will do to the city centre.
The Scotsman has learned controversial plans to double Ocean Terminal in size have been shelved after an outcry from business leaders.

Forth Ports, the developer masterminding a 20-year transformation of Leith's docklands, has had to promise
to restrict the amount of new retail space it will create. The company has been forced to redesign the proposed new harbourside arena that will be created next to the existing centre.

About 25,000sq metres of retail space had been sought by the developer – about double what is currently on offer. But it is understand Forth Ports has been forced to chop 10,000sq metres off that figure and pledge that of the remaining 15,000, just 5,000 will be developed between now and 2015.

The developers of the St James Centre and a number of major retail operators in the city centre are understood to have been lobbying the city council to block Forth Ports' plans.

Council officials' stance is thought to have hardened as plans for the replacement the new St James Centre have taken shape. Forth Ports has had to resubmit its outline planning application for the docks – the biggest ever submitted in Edinburgh – almost a year after finalising its initial plans.

It was hoping to lure Selfridges to Leith for its first store in Scotland, as well as to offer existing tenants Marks & Spencer and Debenhams bigger stores.

However a source at the city council said: "A major priority for Edinburgh at the moment is getting the city centre back on its feet as a retail destination.

"A huge effort is going into attracting interest in Princes Street and surrounding developments like the one at the St James Centre. Allowing Ocean Terminal to double in size doesn't make sense." Andrew Murphy, general manager of John Lewis, who chairs Essential Edinburgh, a new consortium of city centre businesses, said: "The damage was done to an extent when so much out-of-town retail development was allowed in Edinburgh in the 1980s and 1990s. There's a real danger the city centre could be dragged down if new retail developments on the outskirts are allowed.

"Some form of new retail would be acceptable in and around Ocean Terminal, as long as it is only in the form of retail to support the new housing in the area, such as supermarkets or newsagents."

Retail expert Niall Macdonald, director of retail at Jones Lang LaSalle, said: "We shouldn't close the door on out-of-town retail development particularly given the fact that the proposed St James Quarter redevelopment will greatly improve the retail offer in the city. But you have to question whether there is a requirement for additional retail space in Leith as the residential developments haven't sold as well as expected."

A spokesman for Forth Ports confirmed a number of alterations had been made to the outline planning application, but added: "The original 25,000sq metre figure was very much an indicative figure that was always likely to come down."



The full article contains 530 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 11 July 2008 12:48 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Abel Magwitch,

Hamilton 11/07/2008 03:44:52
Hard to say anything constructive here. The hidden assumption seems to be that economic development in Edinburgh must be based on SHOPPING which these days involves goods made in the far East.

Don't let's rock the boat by attracting too many shoppers to one part of Edinburgh or the other! No one says mentions those dirty words ADDED VALUE IN SCOTLAND. With international shipping costs going up and China facing almost insuperable problems, it may be time to change the mindset and think about making things here instead of closing down manufacturing industry.

Scotland used to be good at original thinking,let us pray that it still is.
2

Gina Gibson,

Wales 11/07/2008 06:16:18
I had to laugh at this comment:-

"However a source at the city council said: "A major priority for Edinburgh at the moment is getting the city centre back on its feet as a retail destination.""

They should try getting rid of those horrible tourist tat shops (Gold brothers) on Princes street if they want to achieve that goal!
3

Yok Finney,

Ross-shire 11/07/2008 07:01:21
Modern well-lit attractive affordable workshops where people could make useful things would seem a vital feature for our towns and cities. Schools could teach more craft skills. That's my useful plan.
4

Spoot,

Third rock pool on the left 11/07/2008 09:00:40
Another great Scotsman headline: "expansion plan shrinks".
5

Americanbob,

Edinburgh 11/07/2008 09:05:31
Oh great! Now we're gonna have tram cars that will go all the way to Ocean Terminal so you can buy your copy of the Scotsman in the "supermarkets or newsagents". What a wonderful way to blow £750m
6

Alasdair,

11/07/2008 09:15:43
One might cynically imagine that the market downturn, coupled with the fact that it took over a year to fill that rotten Ocean Terminal in the first place, may have had more of a bearing on this decision than any heartfelt concerns about the increasingly windswept Princes Street.
7

Norman,

11/07/2008 11:10:17
You often hear talk of "Edinburgh businesses this" and "Edinburgh businesses that" as though they're some unified body, all working together.

This sort of thing shows up that it's all about competition. Ocean Terminal is a far more pleasant shopping experience than the crowded low-ceilinged St James Centre for one thing. And anyone who's queued along the soon to be roadwork-central Princes St waiting on the lights in the rain would rather be under cover I'm sure.
8

Spondoolicks,

qwq 11/07/2008 11:25:28
Yup

Ocean Terminal is a far better experience than dodging the drunks, aggressive beggars, neds and junkies along Princes and George St.

And guess what?

You can PARK easily too!

Edinburgh is a working city - the stupid traffic restrictions have meant that people avoid the centre of town.

Give us back the city centre parking and open up the streets - the shoppers will return
9

Spicey,

Glasgow 11/07/2008 14:56:11
Whats this obsession with the city centre? Why is Ocean terminal, or any other out of town shopping centre (although this one is still very much in town) such an anethma to 'business leaders'? Why dont they want to move? And why do we never here from the business that HAVE moved, saying why they've moved ie cost, space, customers etc.

The whole argument of arguing that it cant be expanded because that would adversely affect the city centre is a bit backwards. Surely that means that people prefer shopping in out of town centres? Doesnt this mean that there should be more of them?

A lot of questions with not a lot of answers.
10

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11/07/2008 15:16:56
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11

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11/07/2008 15:16:56
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12/07/2008 00:30:24
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