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Oxgangs | |
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![]() Oxgangs Crescent and Comiston area | |
Location within theCity of Edinburgh council area Show map of the City of Edinburgh council area | |
Population | Unknown |
Council area | |
Country | Scotland |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | Edinburgh |
Postcode district | EH13 |
Dialling code | 0131 (441, 445) |
Police | Scotland |
Fire | Scottish |
Ambulance | Scottish |
UK Parliament | |
Scottish Parliament | |
55°54′29″N3°13′16″W / 55.908°N 3.221°W /55.908; -3.221 |
Oxgangs is asuburb in the south-west ofEdinburgh,Scotland. Surrounding districts include Caiystane, Dreghorn,Redford,Fairmilehead,Colinton andSwanston and Colinton Mains. Thepost code area for Oxgangs is EH13.
The name derives from "oxgang", an old unit of land measurement.Skene inCeltic Scotland says:
The building of the area started in around 1953/54; before that (with the exception of Colinton Mains) there had only been a number of prefab houses and several farms but it had been mostly farmland and was basically considered to be part of the countryside. The area consists of large public housing schemes aimed at low to middle income groups, ranging from private bungalows to theCity of Edinburgh Council-owned high risetower blocks (although these have now been demolished).
A significant majority of former council-owned properties in Oxgangs have been bought by tenants under theright to buy scheme leaving approximately 659 properties in council ownership thus making it extremely difficult to be allocated a council home in the area.[2]
Peter Hoffmann has written memoirs of growing up in Oxgangs between 1958 and 1972 which capture the era and its social and cultural history. He has also writtenTwo Worlds: The Story Of An Edinburgh Doctor, a biography of Dr Motley, a Black American, and the first general practitioner to set up his practice in the area in the mid-1940s until his retirement in 1978.
There were two small shopping areas at each end of Oxgangs known locally as the "top" and "bottom" shops. The top shops (Oxgangs Broadway) are larger and feature award-winning convenience store called "Premier - Broadway Convenience Store" known as "Dennis'" after the owner of the shop. As of March 2023, the shop has been in the Broadway for 40 years, having been passed down through Dennis' family. He runs it with his wife Linda, who runs the hugely successful Premier Deli, and their daughter Sophie. Other shops in the Broadway include Glo Tanning and Beauty Salon, two barbers and a hairdressers, abookies, twotake aways (a chip shop and a Chinese). There is also a post office and a pharmacy. The bottom shops (Oxgangs Crescent) bottom right of photograph, were demolished along with the high flats, being replaced by housing and a small "Day-Today Express store" in Firrhill Neuk. Located in and around Oxgangs and adjacent areas are a police station, a medical practice, apublic library, a nursery, three primary schools and a high school, and apub.
There are three churches in the area:Church of Scotland,Scottish Episcopal Church and St Mark'sRoman Catholic Church, opened by ArchbishopGordon Gray in 1962.[3] Recently aKingdom Hall was built in the Oxgangs Green area.
Surrounding Oxgangs are three large supermarkets: aTesco next toFirrhill High School, aMorrisons near the Swanston area and aScotmid in Colinton Mains. In 2017,Aldi opened a store on the site where the social work building and St John's church previously stood.
AC Oxgangs, a community football team, was founded in 2001. They currently operate 14 teams selected from a total player pool of around 200 youngsters which range in age from 7 to 18 years old. They play their 7-a-side and 11-a-side home games at Colinton Mains Park just beside Oxgangs Road North where a brand new clubhouse has just[when?] been erected. Younger members occasionally play 4-a-side games at the Saughton Sports Complex off Balgreen Road, but also play 7-a-side games at Colinton Mains Park.
In 2003, after years of campaigning by residents the council decided to demolish and redevelopOxgangs high rise flats. In April 2005 longstanding tower block Capelaw Court was demolished to make way for new housing. Capelaw was one of three high rise flats built in Oxgangs Crescent in 1961 and 1962. The other two buildings (Caerketton Court and Allermuir Court) were demolished in November 2006. The demolition of Capelaw Court was filmed and featured on theNational Geographic Channel, which interviewed residents of Oxgangs and community leader Heather Levy.
Two neighbouring primary schools situated on Oxgangs Green (Comiston and Hunters Tryst) were recently merged and renamed Pentland Primary. At first the Comiston pupils moved into the building formerly known as Hunters Tryst alongside current Tryst pupils while Comiston was renovated and a year later all staff and children moved permanently into the refurbished Comiston building, now known as Pentland Primary.
Public transport is frequent withLothian Buses and the airport bus service is byLothian Buses called Skylink, operating chartered services. Bus routes 4, 5, 16, 27, airport service 400, and night service N16, and an airport night service N400 Only to Airport all serve the area.