Dean Village is only 10 minutes walk from the west end of Princes Street. From it one can walk in either direction along the Water of Leith. I suggest you start at the Gallery of Modern Art on Belford Road. There are two, one across the street from each other (both have cafés). From GOMA No. 2 walk down to Belford Bridge, where there are steps down to the waterway. Follow it to Dean Village. From there reconnect with the walkway and continue along under the might Dean Bridge to Stockbridge. This village has great shops and eats on either side of the bridge there. Check out Circus Lane, St. Stephen Street and Saxe Coburg Place. Get back on the waterway with at the bridge at Stockbridge (steps run down from the clock-towered building) or via steps at the far end of Saxe Coburg Place. Both lead to the Stockbridge Colonies and Glenoble Baths, a large and chimneyed red-brick structure. The colonies, originally build to house local artisans, are a number of short streets that terminate at the Water of Leith. They are cute and clever: the downstairs tenant enters one side of the building; the upstairs tenant enters the other. Both have their own gardens, and one need never see the neighbour. From Glenogle Road it is just a short stroll to the Royal Botanic Gardens. It is easy to plot your walk on Google Maps. When the weather is nice, this amounts to a glorious day out. Hopefully you will experience it and love it as much as I do.
_Wonderful video, it's a captivating that vividly enchanting scenery of Dean Village. Thank you for sharing this wonderful glimpse._
Thank you very much, and thanks for watching.
Lovely. Not seen that part of Edinburgh before.
Dean Village is only 10 minutes walk from the west end of Princes Street. From it one can walk in either direction along the Water of Leith. I suggest you start at the Gallery of Modern Art on Belford Road. There are two, one across the street from each other (both have cafés). From GOMA No. 2 walk down to Belford Bridge, where there are steps down to the waterway. Follow it to Dean Village. From there reconnect with the walkway and continue along under the might Dean Bridge to Stockbridge. This village has great shops and eats on either side of the bridge there. Check out Circus Lane, St. Stephen Street and Saxe Coburg Place. Get back on the waterway with at the bridge at Stockbridge (steps run down from the clock-towered building) or via steps at the far end of Saxe Coburg Place. Both lead to the Stockbridge Colonies and Glenoble Baths, a large and chimneyed red-brick structure. The colonies, originally build to house local artisans, are a number of short streets that terminate at the Water of Leith. They are cute and clever: the downstairs tenant enters one side of the building; the upstairs tenant enters the other. Both have their own gardens, and one need never see the neighbour.
From Glenogle Road it is just a short stroll to the Royal Botanic Gardens. It is easy to plot your walk on Google Maps. When the weather is nice, this amounts to a glorious day out. Hopefully you will experience it and love it as much as I do.
👍👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️👏👏👏👏🌺🌺🌺🌺👏👏👏🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🏴🏴🏴🏴❤️❤️❤️❤️From Kurdstan
Thank you friend!