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Old Town Hall, Leith

Buildings and structures in LeithCategory A listed buildings in EdinburghCity chambers and town halls in ScotlandGovernment buildings completed in 1829Use British English from April 2022
Leith Police Station, Constitution Street (former Town Hall), Edinburgh
Leith Police Station, Constitution Street (former Town Hall), Edinburgh

The Old Town Hall is a municipal building in Queen Charlotte Street, Leith, Scotland. The old town hall, which was the meeting place of Leith Burgh Council, is now used as a police station. It is a Category A listed building.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Old Town Hall, Leith (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Old Town Hall, Leith
Constitution Street, City of Edinburgh Leith

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Wikipedia: Old Town Hall, LeithContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 55.9737 ° E -3.1676 °
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Address

Old Leith Town Hall

Constitution Street
EH6 6RP City of Edinburgh, Leith
Scotland, United Kingdom
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Leith Police Station, Constitution Street (former Town Hall), Edinburgh
Leith Police Station, Constitution Street (former Town Hall), Edinburgh
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Nearby Places

Lamb's House
Lamb's House

Lamb's House is a historic A-listed building in Leith, a northern district of the City of Edinburgh, Scotland, which has served as both a place of residence and warehouse. The present house is an example of early-17th-century architecture typical of harbour towns around the North Sea. The site was originally owned by Edinburgh merchant and shipowner Andrew Lamb. The Lamb family were reputed to have entertained Mary, Queen of Scots, somewhere nearby on her return from France in 1561. A contemporary record claims the young queen "remainit in Andro Lamb's hous be the space of an hour" while messages were sent to Edinburgh informing nobles of her return. In January 1581 he was the owner of the Mary Grace, which was sailing to Flanders with Montbirneau, a servant of Esmé Stewart. In November 1583 his passengers were an embassy to France led by Lord Seton with his son Alexander Seton and the architect William Schaw.Lamb's House is situated at the corner of Burgess Street and Water Street. According to a report prepared by Headland Archaeology Ltd, The front of the house faces SW onto a sunken courtyard, which is currently paved with concrete slabs and surrounded by grass-grown steps rising to the level of the street, approximately 1 m higher than the courtyard, to the SW and SE. A modern single-storey extension to the NW of the house projects out to the SW as far as Burgess Street, and also faces onto the courtyard to the SE. Lamb's House was a National Trust for Scotland property until it was sold to conservation architects for a sum believed to be around £1 million.