Dundas House is a Neoclassical building in Edinburgh, Scotland. It is located at 36 St Andrew Square, in the city's first New Town. The building was completed in 1774 as a private town house for Sir Lawrence Dundas by the architect Sir William Chambers. Much altered internally and extended over the years, today it is the registered office of the Royal Bank of Scotland and its parent, NatWest Group and is protected as a category A listed building.[1]

Dundas House
Dundas House, Edinburgh
LocationSt Andrew Square, Edinburgh, Scotland
Coordinates55°57′17″N 3°11′27″W / 55.954623°N 3.190952°W / 55.954623; -3.190952
Built1771–4
Built forSir Lawrence Dundas, 1st Baronet
ArchitectSir William Chambers
Listed Building – Category A
Official name36 St Andrew Square, Dundas House, Royal Bank of Scotland Head Office
Designated13 April 1965
Reference no.29705
Dundas House is located in Edinburgh city centre
Dundas House
Location within Edinburgh

Background

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The site was previously occupied by a rural tavern known as "Peace and Plenty".[2] This stood on the road from Edinburgh to Stockbridge, later called Gabriels Road, and still extant at its extremities.

When the town council made plans for a New Town drawn up by James Craig in 1767, the site of Dundas House was shown as a proposed church, St. Andrew's (hence the name of the square), acting as a counterpart to St. George's Church on what became Charlotte Square (originally to be called George Square but another scheme to the south of the Old Town had taken that name first). The two were separated by the New Town itself laid out on a formal grid centred on George Street along which the two churches were to face each other.[3]

Sir Lawrence Dundas saw the layout and decided the church site would make a good location for a prestigious town mansion, and in 1768 he acquired the land. Initially, he invited designs from the architects John Carr and James Byres, but their proposals were not adopted. Dundas then turned to Sir William Chambers who drew up plans for the mansion in early 1771. The designs were agreed, and soon afterwards construction began on the house. The building was completed by January 1774.[4]

In 1780 Hugo Arnot described the building as "incomparably the handsomest townhouse we ever saw".[4]

The proposed St Andrew's Church was subsequently built at a less prominent site at 13 George Street.

Commercial use

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Lord Dundas died in 1781 and his son Sir Thomas Dundas, 2nd Baronet inherited the house. Having no great desire to live here (then the site was in the midst of a huge building site as the New Town construction began) he sold the house to the government in 1794 who converted it to the Excise House, which opened in 1795. At this stage it gained the royal coat of arms of the British Customs and Excise in its pediment.[2]

 
Dundas House, drawn by William Elliott, in 1818

Dundas House was acquired by the Royal Bank of Scotland in 1825 for £35,300.[2] The interior was altered in 1825 and 1828 by Archibald Elliot the Younger, and in 1836 by William Burn. Much of these alterations were removed by John Dick Peddie in 1857 when a banking hall with a distinctive pierced dome was added to the rear of the existing house.[5]

In 1834, a statue of John Hope, 4th Earl of Hopetoun, who had served as Governor of the Bank 1820–23, was placed in the garden in front of Dundas House. The statue was originally commissioned in 1824 by a group of high ranking persons in Edinburgh, led by James Gibson Craig, from the sculptor Thomas Campbell. Campbell created it in Rome and it was shipped to Britain in 1828. The current position was agreed by the architect in January 1830, and an appropriate plinth was designed to respect the frontage of Dundas House. Although several sources state that the statue was designed for Charlotte Square, there is no evidence of any plans for locating on that site, and Hope's link to the Royal Bank make Dundas House a more obvious first choice.[2]

In 1972 the 19th-century banking screens and counters were removed and replaced by white marble counters.[citation needed]

Architecture

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Boardroom ceiling, Dundas House
 
The ornate entrance hall
 
The starry domed ceiling over the banking hall in Dundas House

Dundas House is a free-standing house designed in the Palladian style. It was modelled on Roger Morris's 1729 Palladian villa Marble Hill House in Twickenham, London but is much grander.

The house is built of cream sandstone ashlar, weathered to light grey, from Ravelston Quarry some three miles to the west.[6] It is fronted with a set of Corinthian pilasters supporting a large central pediment. The house is faced with ashlar with a rusticated ground floor.[4][5]

The large, opulent banking hall, added by Peddie in 1857, is covered by a large circular blue dome which is pierced by 5 tiers of star-shaped gold-rimmed coffered skylights radiating out from the central oculus which diminish in size towards the centre, representing the firmament.[5] An illustration of this star pattern featured on Royal Bank of Scotland's "Islay" series of banknotes which were in circulation 1987–2016.[7][8][9]

The Dunard Centre

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In 2017, the International Music and Performing Arts Charitable Trust Scotland (IMPACT Scotland) announced plans to develop a 1,000-seat concert venue, to be known as The Dunard Centre, behind Dundas House, replacing a block of banking offices that was built in the 1960s. Dundas House would be retained as a bank and would continue to be accessible to the public.[10] Revised planning permission for the development was granted in 2021 following a legal challenge by the developers of a neighbouring site.[11] Work on clearing the site got under way in February 2023.[12] In June 2024, it was announced that the construction of the building would start early in 2025, with a target completion date in 2029.[13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Historic Environment Scotland. "36 St Andrew Square, Dundas House, Royal Bank of Scotland Head Office, With Associated Additions, Walls, Gatepiers, Gates, Railings And Lamp Standards (LB29705)".
  2. ^ a b c d "The Book of Old Edinburgh Club" (PDF). Old Edinburgh Club (22nd ed.). 1938. Archived (PDF) from the original on 13 November 2022. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
  3. ^ Carley, Michael; Dalziel, Robert; Dargan, Pat; Laird, Simon (2015). Edinburgh New Town: A Model City. Amberley Publishing Limited. ISBN 9781445639598. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
  4. ^ a b c Harris, John; Snodin, Michael, eds. (1996). Sir William Chambers: Architect to George III. Courtauld Institute of Art/Yale University Press. pp. 102–04. ISBN 0300069405. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
  5. ^ a b c Gifford, John; McWilliam, Colin; Walker, David; Wilson, Christopher (1991). The buildings of Scotland: Edinburgh. Yale University Press. p. 325. ISBN 0300096720. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  6. ^ Vaughan, Andrew; Vaughan, Langton (July 2005). "Ravelston Woodland WIAT Management Plan". City of Edinburgh Council. p. 1. Archived from the original on 20 August 2018. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  7. ^ "Edinburgh Photo Library - Royal Bank of Scotland HQ". www.rampantscotland.com. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  8. ^ "RBS plan to share historic Edinburgh HQ". The Scotsman. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  9. ^ "Our Banknotes – The Ilay Series". The Royal Bank of Scotland Group. 2008. Archived from the original on 26 January 2013. Retrieved 27 April 2013.
  10. ^ David Chipperfield Architects (15 March 2018). "The IMPACT Centre" (PDF). Impact Scotland. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  11. ^ Thomas-Alexander, Tiya (13 August 2021). "Fresh plans submitted for £75m Edinburgh concert hall". Construction News. Retrieved 23 April 2024.
  12. ^ Stephen, Phyllis (6 February 2023). "Work begins on Dunard Centre – a new concert hall for Edinburgh". The Edinburgh Reporter. Retrieved 23 April 2024.
  13. ^ Ferguson, Brian (20 June 2024). "When Edinburgh's new concert hall will open and why the £114m New Town venue will be 'transformational'". The Scotsman. Edinburgh. Retrieved 15 July 2024.
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