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Portobello Library, Edinburgh

1897 establishments in ScotlandLibraries in EdinburghPortobello, Edinburgh
Portobello Library, Edinburgh
Portobello Library, Edinburgh

Portobello Library is a public library in Portobello, Edinburgh, Scotland. The current building in Rosefield Place cost £37,500 and was opened on 11 October 1963 by Lord Provost Duncan M. Weatherstone with a stock of 26,000 books and eight staff. The previous accommodation in the Old Town Hall, now Portobello Police Station, was considered unfit for purpose and was criticized for being dirty, dark and overcrowded.Opened in 1897, the year after Portobello was formally incorporated into the City of Edinburgh, the library service is the joint-second oldest in Edinburgh (after Central Library (1890) and joint with Western (Dundee Street) Library (1897).In 1997, Portobello Library celebrated its centenary through a programme of talks.In June 2017, the Edinburgh Tool Library opened a lending service out of Portobello Library.Portobello Library is one of the main venues for events at Portobello's annual book festival in October.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Portobello Library, Edinburgh (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Portobello Library, Edinburgh
Rosefield Avenue, City of Edinburgh Portobello

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Wikipedia: Portobello Library, EdinburghContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

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N 55.9534 ° E -3.1167 °
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Portobello Library

Rosefield Avenue 14
EH15 1AU City of Edinburgh, Portobello
Scotland, United Kingdom
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call+441315295558

Website
edinburgh.gov.uk

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Portobello Library, Edinburgh
Portobello Library, Edinburgh
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Portobello Power Station
Portobello Power Station

Portobello Power Station was a coal-fired power station in Portobello, Edinburgh which was built in 1923 by the Edinburgh Corporation in order to cope with the increasing demand for electricity in the city. Although originally intended to be built in 1913, its construction was delayed because of the First World War, and it was formally opened by George V ten years later. Its electricity was used to power Edinburgh and the surrounding region while waste heat warmed the water of Portobello Open Air Pool. In 1938 the design of the station was extended by Edinburgh architect Ebenezer MacRae; its six individual chimneys were replaced with a single 365 feet tall stack, which weighed 10,000 tons, was made up of 710,000 bricks and cost in the region of £118,000 to build.Between 1952 and 1955, the power station achieved the highest thermal efficiency of any station in the UK, with peak output of around 279 megawatts, although an explosion in February 1953 led to a two-hour power blackout across Edinburgh. The explosion, which could be heard a mile away, was caused by sea spray collecting on high-voltage insulators in the main-grid substation. The power station closed on 31 March 1977 and demolished in 1980; a new housing estate was built on the site. During demolition, the chimney had to be taken down brick by brick because of its proximity to nearby houses.The Portobello coat of arms on the power station was rescued during demolition and it was planned to incorporate it into a new sports centre to be built in the area. This never happened and in 2016 the broken coat of arms was located in a council storage facility in the west of Edinburgh.