What To See Edinburgh
Edinburgh
+
Exploring Edinburgh
Sights *
Ann Street
*
Assembly Hall
*
Assembly Rooms
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Blackford Hill
*
Braid Hills
*
Calton Hill
*
Camera Obscura
*
Charlotte Square
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City Art Centre
*
The Colonies
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Corstorphine
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Cowgate
*
Craigmillar Castle
*
Cramond
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Dean Village
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Duddingston
*
Edinburgh Castle Museums
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Edinburgh Exchange
*
Edinburgh's Festival Centre - The Hub
*
Edinburgh Zoo
*
George Street
*
The Georgian House
*
Gladstone's Land
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The Grassmarket
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Greyfriars Kirk
*
Hanover Street
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The Heart of Midlothian
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Holyrood Abbey
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Holyrood Park
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Huntly House Museum
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John Knox's House
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Lady Stair's House, The Writers' Museum
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The Lawnmarket
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Leith
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The Meadows
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Mercat Cross
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Morningside
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The Mound
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Murrayfield
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Museum of Childhood
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Parliament House
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Parliament Square
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The People's Story museum
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Princes Street
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Princes Street Gardens
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Queen Street
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Register House
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Royal High School
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Royal Scottish Academy
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Royal scottish Observatory
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The Royal Yacht Britannia
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St Andrew Square
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St Giles Cathedral
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St Mary's episcopal Cathedral
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Scotch Whisky Heritage Centre
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The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art and the Dean Gallery
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Scottish National Portrait Gallery
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The Scottish Parliament
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Stockbridge
*
Swanston
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Talbot Rice Art Gallery
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The Tron Kirk
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The University of Edinburgh
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Victoria Street
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The Water of Leith
*
Waterloo Place
*
Waverley Market (princes mall)
Vicinity
+ Vicinity
Walk/Drive
Food&Drink
In The Know
Did You Know?
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George Street
(
Highly Recommended
)
The central street of the three that form the grid of the first stage of the 1766 New Town, George Street has escaped the
development that has wrecked the architecture of Princes Street. This spacious thoroughfare, designed by James Craig and named
after George III, is still liberally endowed with Georgian buildings, many of them housing prestigious businesses and smart
shops. St Andrew's Church (1785), with its fine Corinthian portico, stands near the east end; it was here, in 1843, that dissenting
ministers walked out of the General Assembly to found the Free Church of Scotland. Further west, the Assembly Rooms (1787)
are worth a visit, while several of the opulent Victorian edifices which once housed banks have been transformed into elegant
and lively wine bars, popular with Edinburgh's well-heeled young professionals.
Address:
George Street
Restaurant:
Restaurants, bars and cafés (Inexpensive-Expensive)
Bus:
12, 22, 33, 51
Accessible:
Good
Other:
Charlotte Square; The Georgian House ; Hanover Street
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