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The Hub (Edinburgh)

The Hub
Victoria Hall
Highland Tolbooth St John’s Church
Edinburgh Royal Mile01.jpg
The Hub seen from the Lawnmarket during the Edinburgh Festival.
Coordinates 55°56′56.32″N 3°11′40.73″W / 55.9489778°N 3.1946472°W / 55.9489778; -3.1946472Coordinates: 55°56′56.32″N 3°11′40.73″W / 55.9489778°N 3.1946472°W / 55.9489778; -3.1946472
Operator Edinburgh International Festival
Capacity 400
Construction
Opened 1845
Reopened 1999
Architect James Gillespie Graham and Augustus Welby Pugin
Website
www.thehub-edinburgh.com

The Hub, at the top of Edinburgh's Royal Mile, is the home of the Edinburgh International Festival, and a central source of information on all the Edinburgh Festivals. Its gothic spire - the highest point in central Edinburgh - towers over the surrounding buildings below the castle. The building design was the result of a collaboration between Edinburgh architect J Gillespie Graham and the famous gothic revivalist Augustus Pugin. It was constructed between 1842 and 1845.

The inside houses the Hub Cafe; Hub Tickets, the central box office for the International Festival, which also sells tickets for a wide range of other events; a Main Hall with a capacity of 420, used as a venue for concerts and so on; and two smaller venues, the Glass Room and the Dunard Library, suitable for smaller events.

Prior to the completion of the new Scottish Parliament Building at Holyrood in 2004, the Hub was occasionally used for meetings of the Scottish Parliament when the Church of Scotland's General Assembly Hall was unavailable. The Parliament returned to the Hub for two weeks following the collapse of a beam in its debating chamber on 2 March 2006.

What is now "The Hub" was built for the Church of Scotland both as a parish church and as a purpose-built General Assembly Hall. It was originally known as the Victoria Hall. The General Assembly of the Church of Scotland last met here in 1929, when the Church of Scotland united with the United Free Church of Scotland, thereafter using the former United Free Church's Assembly Hall on The Mound (and continuing to this day.)


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