We've voted in governments which prioritise profit over any kind of social contract for 45 years. Of course places are going to be run down and neglected. Go to the North of England and places which don't have the benefit of tourism are totally ramshackle.
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Thread: Why is Edinburgh so filthy?
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05-05-2025 11:48 AM #31
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05-05-2025 12:28 PM #32This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
There’s a lot of different factors at play at the same time, but the main one is lack of investment/austerity for year after year. What do they THINK is going to happen?
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05-05-2025 12:49 PM #33
I try and vote for who I think will be better for the country and all the people in it. There's a depressing lack of options really on that front and as others have mentioned, the consistent cutting to the bone of funding for local auhtorities is devestating to any town or city. The older I get though, the more I can't particularly be doing with other humans. A lot of what you see on the surface level is other people just being dirty minging barstewards.
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05-05-2025 01:03 PM #34
Interestingly enough, after my earlier rant…
Chargers for electric cars are being installed at my flats (in itself, something that should provide an environmental improvement).
Whilst this is being done, we’ve got to shift our cars. When I was walking to the car this morning there was a council guy out, hacking away some weeds and generally tidying the place up. Fair play to him, and whoever sent him. It’s the first time I’ve seen anything like this in years, and it will have an impact.
The tales of similar happening elsewhere that were mentioned earlier in the thread felt like an world away so I felt it only fair to acknowledge the fact that this was happening, on my doorstep, just this morning.
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05-05-2025 01:15 PM #35
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05-05-2025 08:52 PM #36This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
When it comes to cutbacks though, for as long the Scottish government continues to convince itself that constituents care most about issues like net zero, gender identity and Islamophobia we might ultimately see them pay the price for excluding more pressing issues to voters from their policy making. Just look at the way Reform pretty much swept the boards in England last week. A pledge to kick some ass when it comes to wasteful council spending has clearly been well received. Swinney of course, is making all the right noises about being concerned by Farage & co, when in private he'll be welcoming them making their presence felt in Scotland as it will split his opposition - meaning we're probably lumbered with him for another few years
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06-05-2025 05:17 AM #37
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I was working in a flat off Leith Walk yesterday, working at a window area in the afternoon, there's a guy coming up the street on the other side of the road eating out of some sort of plastic container.
He finishes eating and just drops the container on the pavement, five yards on and he uses a key to enter the stair door opposite where I am. I presume he lives there.
With ****my behaviour like this, what chance do you have of keeping anywhere clean.
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06-05-2025 11:35 PM #38This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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07-05-2025 03:07 AM #39This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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07-05-2025 09:41 AM #40
I could write my thoughts on this all day but just don't have the energy as my ramblings won't fix one iota.
But, the issue, in my opinion, is simply two things. The nature of the people and the pressures on resources.
The dynamic of the make-up of the city has changed a lot in the last 30 years.
We've always been a tourist city but with the advent of cheap online breaks coupled with the Insta 24hr getaway this brings a lot more folk in to the city and this brings a massive amount of single use disposable packaging amongst other things. In the immediate environs of the City Centre, the bins are full to overflowing.
This also leads to higher transient numbers of city dwellers. It's easier to disrespect a place if you fly out on Monday.
It has been argued elsewhere that those who rent don't tend to have the same "community investment" as owner-occupiers.
This brings us to resources, our council (like every other) is stretched to breaking.
30 years ago there were guys out with their "dust carts", every inch of public grass was regularly mowed and the vennels like Fleshmarket Close and the Scotsman Steps were hosed down, top to bottom, 6 days a week.
Today, the council has a hit squad of a couple of guys in one motor that drive around all day targeting the overflowing bins (city centre only) but that's akin to painting the Forth Bridge. Not all grass fields or verges are maintained as regular. Generally only the sports pitches when in season and other areas left to "wild seed" for biodiversity and I genuinely can't remember the last time the city closes were hosed down to flush out the filth.
Where we once had general routine maintenance, we're now relying on individual issues (gulleys/bins/weeds/etc) being reported online/social media and the council targets in response. But this can result in an imbalanced approach, the "squeaky wheel" scenario whereby some areas will be highly targeted due to the noise created, but then in other place residents feel it's not "their job" to report leading to a decline in the immediate amenity which spirals to "the place was always a shïthole, what difference will a telephone call make!".
Ultimately, for those of us that do the city break, turn a blind eye and take no responsibility, this is an issue of our own making .Last edited by speedy_gonzales; 07-05-2025 at 09:43 AM.
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07-05-2025 10:29 AM #41This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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07-05-2025 10:36 AM #42This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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07-05-2025 10:38 AM #43This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Think you're also right about the vast increase in takeaway food outlets/mini supermarkets and the resultant packaging which fills the bins to overflowing. Take a walk down the Bridges and scavenging seagulls have pretty much colonised the place.
Further afield, the explosion in dog ownership coupled with fewer bin collections sees park bins quickly overflowing with poo bags. Great that the majority of owners are responsible but the sight of bags piled on top of already full bins ain't pleasant for anyone, including the refuse collectors who have to deal with it.
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07-05-2025 10:52 AM #44
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Edinburgh is looking so run down in a lot of places.
Princes Street is a disgrace, full of tat shops and money laundering businesses which seem to get ignored.
Graffiti just looks tacky. There's a guy in Portobello who is going around removing graffiti from bus stops and junction boxes but they'll likely just become a blank canvas.
People who throw litter on the street or fly tip are ****bags.
Mind set of modern society. They have a "do what they want" mentality. Challenge them and you end up appearing on social media for likes.
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07-05-2025 10:54 AM #45This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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07-05-2025 04:59 PM #46This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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07-05-2025 06:53 PM #47This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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07-05-2025 08:08 PM #48This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
That aside, just because graffiti's common elsewhere shouldn't mean residents should just accept their stair doors being spray painted as a fact of life, hip hop 'culture' or not. It's moronic, selfish behaviour pure and simple.
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07-05-2025 09:00 PM #49This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-05-2025 11:41 AM #50This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
In Edinburgh, residents are a moot point. The prevalence of so many key safes around the city centre tells me that many tenement flats are used for short term holiday lets. Absentee landlords are not so invested in the external fabric of their buildings. Even then, you could paint the doors, but they'll be tagged and graffitied within the week.
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08-05-2025 11:47 AM #51
I have always liked the idea of "open spaces" for graffiti artists.... and that last word is used deliberately. Some graffiti art is stunning in its creativity and execution. (which opens up the whole debate about "what is art?")
There used to be one near Bristo Square, where people could exercise their craft, without fear of being lifted. From time to time, it would be wiped clean, so that people could start again.
I am not sure if it is there any more, or if there are others like it.
The argument against that, of course, is that a lot of tagging is done (and I know I'm showing my prejudices here ) by people who want to be the rebel, and have no interest in being "in the system".
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08-05-2025 11:59 AM #52This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I think it must be the B team so to speak who operate there though as it's mostly pretty crap. I like graffiti if it's done well and the stuff there frankly isn'tPM Awards General Poster of The Year 2015, 2016, 2017. Probably robbed in other years
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08-05-2025 12:31 PM #53This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I love it, it looks fantastic.
It's on my daughter's walk home from school. My partner took an absolutely beautiful video of the kids running to each other on the walk home the other day and sent it on to the grannies. The graffiti suggested to my mum that it was some sort of urban hell hole and she's seemingly been doing a fair bit of soul searching that her offspring are having to live in such an area. After dark I'd probably take the main road rather than walk along there these days but I'm along there a fair bit and absolutely love it.
Big difference between areas like this which are designated to look just like that and the unnecessary tagging which seems to be cropping up everywhere. I don't even mind that in most places, but I think we should be making a concerted effort to prevent it from popping up in certain areas.
It's the general cleanliness I have the biggest issue with. There shouldn't be any excuse for overflowing bins or the place being stinking. I'm on board with the general concept of wild plants and flowers (and don't really want the place to be splashed and controlled with chemicals) and there's probably a tolerable level of general graffiti.
Funnily enough though, since this thread started I've started to actively notice more street cleaners out and about doing their thing than I've been aware of seeing for years.Last edited by Smartie; 08-05-2025 at 01:24 PM.
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08-05-2025 01:20 PM #54This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-05-2025 01:25 PM #55This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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09-05-2025 12:08 PM #56This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Mind you, I'm guessing you might be in danger of losing your hands if you were caught spray painting somebody's door there!
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09-05-2025 12:12 PM #57
Another bugbear is things like this:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cwy7y3q5xzro
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cq8k5e0dxjwo
North Bridge I can just about understand the difficulties due to the age of the structure, but for the budgeted costs to quadruple is Scottish government ferry fiasco type incompetence.
As for the 'old' Missoni hotel, how can a much-vaunted structure build only in 2009 require half a decade of 'remedial works'?!
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10-05-2025 07:37 AM #58
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Who is responsible for the city mess?
Look in the mirror.
If you see litter/ have weeds near your door etc Do something about it instead of hoping that “they will have to fix this mess”
If people start to own issues even in small ways then things will improve.
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10-05-2025 08:05 AM #59This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
That’s different issue from retail/restaurant waste and litter IMO.
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10-05-2025 10:01 AM #60
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Litter, as you say is a different problem. Let’s start somewhere…… pick up a bit of litter everyday and put it into a bin.
Small steps.
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