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New Club, Edinburgh

1787 establishments in ScotlandBuildings and structures completed in 1969Category A listed buildings in EdinburghClubs and societies in EdinburghListed clubhouses in the United Kingdom
New Town, EdinburghOrganisations based in EdinburghOrganizations established in 1787Use British English from August 2017
New Club, 86 Princes Street, Edinburgh (geograph 3503984)
New Club, 86 Princes Street, Edinburgh (geograph 3503984)

The New Club is a private social club in the New Town area of Edinburgh, Scotland. Founded in 1787, it is Scotland's oldest club. The club occupied premises on St Andrew Square from 1809 until 1837, when it moved to purpose-built rooms on Princes Street. The 1837 building was replaced with a modern building to a design by Reiach and Hall, which is protected as a category A listed building. Women were admitted in 1970, and offered full membership from 2010. The only stated requirements for membership are that a candidate is over 18 and is "clubbable".

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

New Club, Edinburgh
Princes Street, City of Edinburgh New Town

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Wikipedia: New Club, EdinburghContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 55.951944444444 ° E -3.1977777777778 °
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Address

Princes Street 84A
EH2 2ER City of Edinburgh, New Town
Scotland, United Kingdom
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New Club, 86 Princes Street, Edinburgh (geograph 3503984)
New Club, 86 Princes Street, Edinburgh (geograph 3503984)
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Nearby Places

Royal Scottish Academy Building
Royal Scottish Academy Building

The Royal Scottish Academy building, the home of the Royal Scottish Academy, is situated on The Mound in the centre of Edinburgh, was built by William Henry Playfair in 1822-6 and extended in 1831-6 for the Board of Manufactures and Fisheries. Along with the adjacent National Gallery of Scotland, their neo-classical design helped transform Edinburgh into a modern-day Athens of the North. One of the bodies that proposed the building in 1821 was the Royal Institution for the Encouragement of the Fine Arts in Scotland after which the building was named the Royal Institution from 1826 to 1911. From the completion of the original building, the Royal Institution shared it with the Board of Manufactures (the owners), the Royal Society of Edinburgh and the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. The building, along with the National Gallery of Scotland, was remodelled in 1912 by William Thomas Oldrieve. The statue of Queen Victoria atop the building was sculpted by Sir John Steell. In 2003 railings (lost in World War II) together with a series of traditional lamps, were restored around both the Academy and the National Gallery behind, isolating each building from the public space here. The building is managed by the National Galleries of Scotland but a 1910 Order grants the RSA permanent administration offices in the building. The building was recently refurbished as part of the Playfair Project. Exhibition space is shared throughout the year by the RSA with the NGS and other exhibiting societies: the Society of Scottish Artists, Visual Arts Scotland and the Royal Society of Watercolourists.