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COUNCIL APPROVES FACT FINDING

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Councillors today approved the Outline Business Case for extending the trams. 

In doing so, they triggered a year-long ‘fact-finding’ Stage 2, during which tender prices will be gathered by which to check affordability, current tram use will be further assessed, and – it is hoped – some lessons from Lord Hardie’s Tram Inquiry will be  learned.

A final decision on whether or not to proceed with the scheme will be taken next autumn.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE SHOW SO FAR?

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Changeworks are asking Edinburgh flat and tenement dwellers for their opinions about shared on-street bins used for rubbish and recycling. 

‘It is important that Edinburgh flat residents are given the opportunity to give feedback on their current waste and recycling service.’, says Changeworks’ Head of Projects Sam Mills. 

‘This will help the City of Edinburgh Council to improve bin design, as well as collections, bin locations and recycling communications which will benefit the local community.’ 

DON’T BE RASH WITH THE ASH

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Remember HAL in Arthur C. Clark’s 2001: A Space Odyssey

The sentient Heuristically programmed Algorithmic computer began to malfunction in mid-mission. 

Artificially conscious, HAL knew he risked being disconnected, so not unreasonably turned against his astronaut masters with fatal consequences. 

Something similar may be happening in Regent Place, where a tree has grown too large for the garden and is beginning to cause structural damage. 

LEITH STREET CHOP

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The Greenside Link is no more. 

In still conditions during the small hours of this morning, contractors succeeded in cutting it at either end and gently lowering the central section by crane onto the development site beside the ruins of the King James Hotel. 

If you compare the photo below with the one we posted yesterday, you’ll notice not a lot has changed.

Except for a sudden abundance of thin air.

NOT GONE YET

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The Leith Street pedestrian bridge between the former St James Centre and the Q-Park over the road was still in place this morning. 

It had been timetabled for removal between 1.00am and 8.00am today, but the set-up fell 2 hours behind schedule and had to be temporarily abandoned. 

A second attempt to cut and remove the bridge in a series of lifts will be made tonight, wind permitting, and the road between Calton Road and Waterloo Place will probably be closed again to pedestrians, cyclists and all other vehicles. 

TIME FOR A CHANGE

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When does autumn begin and end? 

The answer depends on whether you’re a meteorologist or an astronomer. 

Weather buffs divide up the year into 3-month quarters, with autumn starting on 1 September and finishing on 30 November. 

Astronomers preferred start date is the autumn equinox, when the hours of day and night are approximately equal. For technical reasons beyond the scope of this article, that date wobbles around a bit, but this year autumn will begin on 22 September and end on 21 December with the winter solstice.

PICARDY PLACE IS CHANGING

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 WHETHER YOU LIKE IT OR NOT 

Together for Edinburgh is the team behind the ‘regeneration’ of Edinburgh’s East End.* 

In a recent circular to Broughton addresses, they describe themselves as ‘looking at making improvements to Picardy Place and enhancing the eastern gateway to the city’.

BARKING UP THE WRONG TREE

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 MISTAKEN IDENTITY AND MISSED OPPORTUNITIES? 

Essential Edinburgh have been granted permission to remove a Japanese cherry from St Andrew Square Gardens (Ref. 17/04090/TCO). 

Their reason for taking it down is that it’s ‘in decline’, and they undertake to replace it with another of the same species.

CYCLISTS PUSH BACK AT LEITH STREET TIGHT SQUEEZE

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Measures for the temporary (44-week) closure of Leith Street are now in place, but the promised access for cyclists between Calton Road and Waterloo Place has disappointed some.

Back in March, the word was that developers had agreed to an on-road, two-way cycleway on the west side of Leith Street. It was, we understand, made perfectly clear to developers that the cycleway ‘must connect easily and safely to cycle provision at either end’.

THINGS FALL APART

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'THE HEAVY OF YOUR BODY PARTS AND THE COOL AIR OF THE AIR CONDITION'  — REVIEW 

Before viewing Glasgow-based artist Ross Little’s film, one passes a tank in which jellyfish drift on invisible currents, illuminated in blue and pink.

These composite creatures, these ‘living transparencies’ travel the world without conscious direction, insubstantial, seaborne, vulnerable, venomous.