Scottish Poetry Library extension completed
December 1 2015
Scotland based fit-out contractor Morris & Spottiswood has completed a project to help transform Edinburgh’s famous Scottish Poetry Library.Morris & Spottiswood successfully secured a one-off tender to build a single-storey extension to the front of the building – located just off the Royal Mile – as well as an external terrace space to accommodate poetry readings.
The Creative Scotland and Edinburgh Council-backed facility, which holds the largest open-access collection of Scottish poetry in the world, has since re-opened following a £380,000 revamp.
Contracts manager Steven Welch said Morris & Spottiswood worked closely with Dundee-based architects Nicoll Russell Studios to adapt to the complexities of the project.
“For a relatively small project it proved to be quite complicated,” he said. “We were tasked with constructing an extension to the front of the building including an external terrace area for poetry nights and other social gatherings, which substantially increased the footprint of the existing building.
“The design presented a number of unusual challenges on what was a very tight site. The existing external stair and garage had become redundant over the years and these have been replaced with a cleverly-designed extension that seamlessly unites the new building with the existing, re-using timber cladding panels, glazed screens and even the blue glazed brickwork.
“Removing parts of the existing structure, while retaining and extending its fabric and capacity were not without their difficulties, but this project was a good example of the benefits of close partnership working involving the end user and all members of the design team throughout.”
The three-storey Scottish Poetry Library, the only independently constituted and housed poetry library in Europe, holds more than 45,000 books.
At the re-opening event Culture Secretary Fiona Hyslop described it as “truly unique” while the National Poet for Scotland, Liz Lochhead, said the new incarnation was “even more user-friendly than before”.
In addition to the new extension and terrace area, it also now has a new soundproof space to allow poetry to be recorded, as well as improved reading and education facilities and a retail area.
Morris & Spottiswood delivers projects in four key areas - fit-out, housing, mechanical and electrical (M & E) and maintenance. By developing each division individually, it is able to integrate its services to offer tailored solutions to clients across a wide range of sectors.
The £74.4m turnover firm, which has offices in Edinburgh, Glasgow, Warrington and Leeds, saw sales double in its M & E division alone last year.
4 Comments
#1 Posted by Sue Pearman on 1 Dec 2015 at 10:33 AM
This is a real shame - the building has lost the subtle poetry of the original
#2 Posted by Jon on 1 Dec 2015 at 12:13 PM
Did Morris & Spottiswood take out an advert fee for this article?
#3 Posted by basho on 3 Dec 2015 at 13:30 PM
This extension has completely obliterated the small public space next to the steps. It's totally changed the scale of the building.
#4 Posted by neil on 4 Dec 2015 at 15:14 PM
Yet another one where given the brief it is an OK job but the brief was wrong.
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