Ocean Terminal, Edinburgh (original) (raw)
Shopping mall in Edinburgh, Scotland
Ocean Terminal
View from the south in 2017 | |
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Location | Edinburgh, Scotland |
Coordinates | 55°58′53″N 3°10′37″W / 55.98139°N 3.17694°W / 55.98139; -3.17694 |
Address | Ocean DriveLeithEdinburgh EH6 6JJ |
Opening date | 2001 |
Developer | Forth Ports |
Owner | ICG Group / Ambassador Group |
Architect | Sir Terence Conran |
No. of stores and services | 85 |
Parking | 800 |
Public transit access | Ocean Terminal |
Website | www.oceanterminal.com |
Ocean Terminal is the largest shopping centre in the Leith area of Edinburgh, Scotland.[1] It is within the City of Edinburgh.
Royal Yacht Britannia
It is built on former industrial docklands on the north side of the city, at the edge of the boundary between formerly separate ports of Newhaven and Leith. The land was formerly occupied by the Henry Robb shipyard, which closed in 1983. Since then, the area has undergone urban renewal and regeneration, much led by and on the lands in the ownership of Forth Ports.
These and other developments have played key parts in the regeneration of Leith.[2] The now-decommissioned Royal Yacht Britannia, which is accessed via the Britannia Visitor Centre within Ocean Terminal, is permanently berthed next to the building and can be viewed from the centre. Although originally planned to also function as a working passenger terminal, the permanent berthing of the Britannia has meant that the building has never been used for this function, despite its name.
The berth occupied by Britannia was originally planned to handle cruise liners. As Britannia is now permanently moored alongside the Ocean Terminal, Forth Ports plan to build another terminal for cruise liners.
There is an Antony Gormley sculpture located on an abandoned pier behind the building.
Ocean Dining food court overlooking Western Harbour
PureGym, H&M, Superdry and HMV are amongst the main shops; in total there are some 85 shops, 6 restaurants, 3 coffee shops, a variety of bars and cafés, as well as a 12-screen Vue cinema, an urban dance studio, children's soft-play area and a day spa.[3]
British Home Stores was an anchor tenant until 2016, and Debenhams until 2021.
The mall currently has an NHS vaccination clinic on the second floor.[4]
The centre has multi level car parking facilities at the Southern end of the building.
Bus & tram connections at the entrance
Lothian Buses services 10, 34, 35, 36 & Skylink 200 run from the stops at the front entrance.
Edinburgh Bus Tours also stop here on their Majestic route.
Ocean Terminal has a stop on the Edinburgh Trams light rail route, which opened with the Newhaven line extension in June 2023.
Services run to Newhaven and to the City Centre and Edinburgh Airport.
Ocean Terminal tram stop is an island platform located at the main entrance plaza.
| Preceding station | | Edinburgh Trams | | Following station | | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | ------------------------------------------------------------ | | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | Newhaventowards Newhaven | | Newhaven – Edinburgh Airport | | Port of Leithtowards Airport |
View of the northern section in 2014
In 2018, the previous owners of the centre announced plans to rebrand the centre as Porta, focusing on outlets and factory stores.[5] These plans were dropped in June 2020 by the new owners, ICG Real Estate and Ambassador Group .[6][7]
City of Edinburgh Council have approved plans for Phase One of a masterplan lodged by the centre’s owners that would see the northern section of the building demolished and a new frontage constructed, with retail units and public realm. The demolition work got underway in Spring 2024.[8]
Demolition work on the north section, June 2024
Plans were submitted in November 2022 for Phase Two, which includes a large scale residential development, and received unanimous council approval in January 2024.[9]
- ^ "Ocean Terminal". Scottish-places.info. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
- ^ "Leith Docks Regeneration". Dictionary of Scottish Architects. Retrieved 4 January 2017.
- ^ "Ocean Terminal". Visit Scotland. Retrieved 4 January 2017.
- ^ NHS Lothian (1 February 2023). "NHS Lothian Vaccine Clinic" (PDF).
- ^ "Ocean Terminal to be renamed Porta as owners announce major revamp". www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com.
- ^ "Plans to rename Ocean Terminal 'Porta' dropped amid £10m investment". www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com.
- ^ Burns, Hamish (15 June 2020). "New owners to invest £10m after Edinburgh shopping centre changes hands". businessInsider.
- ^ "Ocean Terminal | Opening Up The Waterfront". OCEAN TERMINAL. Retrieved 26 September 2023.
- ^ Team, Editorial (11 January 2024). "Leith's Ocean Terminal receives unanimous approval for multi-million pound regeneration project". Scottish Business News. Retrieved 10 March 2024.
Media related to Ocean Terminal Shopping Centre at Wikimedia Commons