Destination: Edinburgh
What To See
Edinburgh
Edinburgh
  + Exploring Edinburgh
  Sights
* Ann Street
* Assembly Hall
* Assembly Rooms
* Blackford Hill
* Braid Hills
* Calton Hill
* Camera Obscura
* Charlotte Square
* City Art Centre
* The Colonies
* Corstorphine
* Cowgate
* Craigmillar Castle
* Cramond
* Dean Village
* Duddingston
* Edinburgh Castle Museums
* Edinburgh Exchange
* Edinburgh's Festival Centre - The Hub
* Edinburgh Zoo
* George Street
* The Georgian House
* Gladstone's Land
* The Grassmarket
* Greyfriars Kirk
* Hanover Street
* The Heart of Midlothian
* Holyrood Abbey
* Holyrood Park
* Huntly House Museum
* John Knox's House
* Lady Stair's House, The Writers' Museum
* The Lawnmarket
* Leith
* The Meadows
* Mercat Cross
* Morningside
* The Mound
* Murrayfield
* Museum of Childhood
* Parliament House
* Parliament Square
* The People's Story museum
* Princes Street
* Princes Street Gardens
* Queen Street
* Register House
* Royal High School
* Royal Scottish Academy
* Royal scottish Observatory
* The Royal Yacht Britannia
* St Andrew Square
* St Giles Cathedral
* St Mary's episcopal Cathedral
* Scotch Whisky Heritage Centre
* The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art and the Dean Gallery
* Scottish National Portrait Gallery
* The Scottish Parliament
* Stockbridge
* Swanston
* Talbot Rice Art Gallery
* The Tron Kirk
* The University of Edinburgh
* Victoria Street
* The Water of Leith
* Waterloo Place
* Waverley Market (princes mall)
Vicinity
  + Vicinity

  Walk/Drive
  Food&Drink
  In The Know
  Did You Know?
The Mound

( Highly Recommended )

Until the 1760s the site now occupied by Princes Street Gardens was filled with an unlovely lake known as the Nor' Loch, created as a northern defence for the castle in 1460. In 1763 it was partially drained for the construction of the North Bridge, to allow access to the planned New Town. To the west the marshy ground was gradually bridged by the mounds of earth from the building works to the north; by 1784 it was a rough causeway for carriages and was completed by 1830. An estimated two million cartloads of dumped earth went into its construction - a veritable mound. Its two landmarks are the Royal Scottish Academy and the National Gallery of Scotland.


Address: The Mound
Bus: 2, 10, 20 45
Accessible: Very good
Other: Princes Street; Princes Street Gardens; National Gallery of Scotland; Royal Scottish Academy
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