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| Niddrie | |
|---|---|
Location within theCity of Edinburgh council area Show map of the City of Edinburgh council area | |
| OS grid reference | NT296716 |
| Community council | |
| Council area | |
| Country | Scotland |
| Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
| Post town | EDINBURGH |
| Postcode district | EH16 |
| Postcode district | EH15 |
| Dialling code | 0131 |
| Police | Scotland |
| Fire | Scottish |
| Ambulance | Scottish |
| UK Parliament | |
| Scottish Parliament | |
| 55°55′55″N3°6′52″W / 55.93194°N 3.11444°W /55.93194; -3.11444 | |

Niddrie (/ˈnɪdri/) is a residential suburb inEdinburgh, Scotland. It is situated in the south-east of the city, south-west of theseaside area ofPortobello, and west ofMusselburgh inEast Lothian nearFort Kinnaird retail park. The western section of Niddrie is also known by the alternative name ofCraigmillar.
The place name is believed to be ofBrythonic origin, *nowid treb meaning "new settlement".[1] It was known historically as Niddry Marischal to distinguish it from several other nearby localities:Longniddry and Niddry Bents.
The Wauchope family owned the majority of the area up to the 1930s.Robert Wauchope,Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of Ireland, was born in Niddrie Marischal around 1500. In the 1590sArchibald Wauchope of Niddrie was a supporter of the rebelEarl of Bothwell.[2] The family home Niddrie Marischal House was immediately west of the present-day Jack Kane Centre sports complex inHunters Hall Park. The Wauchopes eventually donated their lands to the city.
In 1839John Henderson designed the lodge and gates to the Mansion. The House was demolished although the vaulted tomb-house, which adjoined the western extension, remains as a listed building.[3]
From the mid-19th century the area was developed by the family for coal-mining purposes with several pits being built and a great number of miners cottages were erected.[4]
Social housing was built in Niddrie Mains byEdinburgh Corporation from 1927 until the mid-1930s, under the designs of City Architect,Ebenezer James MacRae. The new housing was linked to a majorslum clearance scheme in the St. Leonard's Ward of Edinburgh. Families from these cleared areas were housed together with local coal mining families from Niddrie.
The Niddrie Mains council housing estate is now almost completely demolished, with very few of the buildings surviving. The land has been mostly redesignated for private rather than social housing.
The site is currently being developed by PARC, an ALMO orarms-length management organisation, fully owned by theCity of Edinburgh Council. The development includes a new primary school for the surrounding area, with the old Niddrie Mill Primary School and St Francis Primary School being put on a joint campus. The first, though unassociated, phase of redevelopment in the Niddrie Mains area was the Hays area, constructed around 2001 and consisting of two-storey blocks with gardens andpedestrianised streets.
Between the 1980s and 2000s, Niddrie suffered from a high crime rate.Antisocial behaviour is fairly common, though gang fights andknife crime are of a lesser degree today compared to the levels recorded between the 1980s and 2000s. During the 1980s, Niddrie was one of the most drug-riddled communities in Scotland,[citation needed] and still has problems withclass A drug use today.[citation needed] For a number of years, the area has had problems with joyriding and youngsters stealing cars and motorbikes.[5]Greendykes and Niddrie Mains was ranked as the fourth-most deprived area in Scotland in the 2006Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation.[6]
Episodes of public disorder have seen police and fire service personnel subject to attack.
During the bonfire night period in 2023, a police vehicle was struck by a Molotov cocktail in the area with gangs on motorcycles racing through the area "while fireworks were lobbed at the ground". Young people in masks were reported to be filming themselves using a "rocket launcher to shoot fireworks at police". In an effort to control the disorder several roads in the area were closed in the Hay Avenue area of the suburb and police became involved in a stand-off with around 100 youths on the Sunday night.[7] On 5 November 2023 the BBC reported that "about 50 young people have clashed with riot police in Edinburgh with fireworks and petrol bombs being thrown directly at officers".[8]
Similar events were repeated on the 31st of October in Niddrie and other neighbourhoods the following year, with buses and police vehicles targeted with bricks and fireworks, leaving a police officer injured. The first Scottish Firework Control Zones were enforced from November 1st-10th in Niddrie,Balerno,Calton Hill andSeafield, banning unlicensed use of fireworks in these areas.[9]Officers were once again targeted on bonfire night, with one person later convicted under the Fireworks and Pyrotechnic Articles (Scotland) Act of 2022.[10]
| Ethnicity | Portobello/Craigmillar Ward | Edinburgh[11] |
|---|---|---|
| White | 85.0% | 84.9% |
| Asian | 7.5% | 8.6% |
| Black | 3.0% | 2.1% |
| Mixed | 2.2% | 2.5% |
| Other | 2.2% | 1.9% |
Niddrie once had its own railway station, on theEdinburgh and Dalkeith Railway. Today the nearest stations are atBrunstane andNewcraighall, both located onEdinburgh Crossrail andBorders Railway.
Lothian Buses provide 8 buses to the area:
2Hermiston Gait - Broomhouse - Saughton - Gorgie - Haymarket - Grassmarket - Southside - Prestonfield - Niddrie - Asda
14Muirhouse - Granton - Pilton - Ferry Road - Leith - Elm Row - North Bridge - Southside - Prestonfield - Niddrie - Greendykes
21Royal Infirmary - Niddrie - Portobello - Leith - Ferry Road - Silverknowes - Davidsons Mains - Clermiston - Sighthill - Gyle Centre/Clovenstone
30Queen Margaret University - Fort Kinnaird - Niddrie - Prestonfield - Southside - Princes Street - Longstone -Wester Hailes - Clovenstone
46Rosewell - Bonnyrigg - Dalkieth - Danderhall - Royal Infirmary - Niddrie - Fort Kinnaird - Stoneybank - Musselburgh
48Gorebridge - Mayfield - Dalkieth - Danderhall - Royal Infirmary - Niddrie - Fort Kinnaird - Stoneybank - Musselburgh
400Edinburgh Airport - Gyle Centre - Wetser Hailes - Colinton - Oxgangs - Kaimes - Royal Infirmary - Niddrie - Fort Kinnaird
N30Westside Plaza - Baberton - Clovenstone - Longstone - Princes Street - Niddrie - Queen Margaret University - Stoneybank -Musselburgh
Immediately adjacent toCraigmillar, and part of Edinburgh City's political ward Craigmillar/Portobello, it was also the home of theCraigmillar Festival Society, a community arts organisation, founded by local mother and "Woman Of Achievement"Helen Crummy.