Niddry Street Vaults Edinburgh - Ghost Hunt listings

Niddry Street Vaults Edinburgh, Edinburgh Sat 23rd October 2010

Niddry Street Vaults Edinburgh - Ghost Hunt | Niddry Street Vaults Edinburgh Edinburgh | Lineups |  | Sat 23rd October 2010
Edinburgh Paranormal invites you to join us on night of investigation into the Niddry Steet Vaults, deep under Edinburghs South Bridge.

Date: Saturday 23rd October 2010
Venue: Niddry Street Vaults Edinburgh »
Location: Edinburgh »
Doors: 00:00 til 06:15

Niddry Street Vaults Edinburgh - Ghost Hunt details

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Lineup and details for Niddry Street Vaults Edinburgh - Ghost Hunt on Saturday 23rd October 2010

Edinburgh Paranormal invites you to join us on night of investigation into the Niddry Steet Vaults, deep under Edinburghs South Bridge rich in history that has moulded Edinburgh to this day.

Edinburgh Paranormal has investigated the vaults on many occassions and each time had many different unexplained experiences.Main phenomena that has been captured was mainly some impressive EVPs, we are going back once again the week before halloween to conduct experiments in the vaults with both equipment and our guest investigators.So come along and be a part of this evening, assist us with our experiments into the vaults and use the equipment and see if you can maybe capture something that you cannot explain!

Refreshments both hot and cold will be supplied, and also snacks will be made avalible for our guest investigators.

Tickets - £35.00 per ticket - Breakfast and Hot drink included

Event Itinerary


23 October Midnight Please meet our team out side of the Tron Kirk (Please see below for map & information)

24 October 12.15am
After everyone has checked in with the team we will then head down towards to vaults.

At this point we will have a brief health and safety advice from the location managers. Then our team will brief health and safety and signing of H & S documents will take place for everyone’s safety on the night ahead.

You will be advised on any experiments that are running just in case someone might trip motion alarms etc…

24 October 12.30am
A general talk on some of the equipment. Each person will be able to take and use what ever equipment they would like to try out.

24 October 12.45am
we will make groups and we will go away and get used to the atmosphere and set up our experiments.

24 October 1.00am
We will then start vigils

24 October 2.30am Experiment

24 October 3.00am
EVP experiments with white noise!

24 October 4.00am
One large group vigil

24 October 5.00am
Break and a quick chat about the night so far, cataloguing our findings.

24 October 6.00am Breakfast Arrives

24 October 6.15am
Good Morning sleepy head!

Location Information

 
Edinburgh’s famous South Bridge; a modern highway of its day, built to link the Old Town’s High Street with the University buildings on the south side of the city.

Three closes* (Marlin’s Wynd, Peebles Wynd and Niddry’s Wynd) were demolished in the Cowgate area of the city to make way for this grand scheme.

These closes dominated an area considered to be one of Edinburgh’s poorest and most run-down quarter – and at the time that was really saying something!

The winding, crowded streets were knocked to the ground and the stones reused in a commendable, yet money conscious version of Georgian recycling.

Building work commenced in 1785. The bridge consisted of 19 stone arches, spanning a chasm just over 1000 feet long. At its highest point it stood 31 feet above ground and had foundations which penetrated Edinburgh’s bed rock as far down as 22 ft.

However, Edinburgh was a fearful and superstitious place at the turn of the 18th century, both of real and imagined harm.

The citizens fear of what the unearthly and supernatural could inflict was exacerbated by their inherent mistrust of the invading English, a long held belief that resulted in the building of the defensive Flodden Wall after the disastrous Battle of the same name in 1513. This man-made barrier around the outskirts of the city, combined with Edinburgh’s natural geography, forced residents to live virtually on top of one another - in some cases in houses 14 stories high - rather than expanding outwards as with most developing cities.

This air of claustrophobia, fear and mistrust bred an atmosphere of anxiety among the locals. When the South Bridge was finally completed in 1788 it was deemed to be an appropriate and fitting honour that the Bridges’ eldest resident, a well known and respected Judges’ wife, should be the first to cross this fine architectural structure.

Unfortunately, several days before the grand opening, the lady in question passed away. But promises had been made, hands had been shaken and the city fathers felt obliged to honour their original agreement, and so it was, that the first “body” to cross the South Bridge crossed it in a coffin.

The locals were aghast! The bridge was now cursed! The majority of the townsfolk refused point blank to cross the bridge for many years, preferring instead the awkward and impractical route through the deep valley of the Cowgate. 18th century Edinburgers may seem overly superstitious by today’s standards, but over the following centuries it slowly became apparent that they might, in fact, have had a point…

As time passed, space on Edinburgh’s South Bridge started to sell at premium prices; land was fetching more per square foot than anywhere else in Europe. Businessmen started to build shops along the top of the bridge, to make the most of passing trade. To accommodate these shop fronts, tenement houses were built along both sides of 18 of the original 19 arches, leaving only the Cowgate arch visible, as it remains today. To maximise space further, floors and ceilings were built beneath the blocked-in arches constructing dark, airless, vaulted chambers. These areas were originally used as workshops for the businesses above while the vaults below ground level were used for storage.

Records from the day, recent excavations and various artefacts which have since been discovered, all point to the fact that in the early days of the bridge many businesses thrived in these man-made, “underground” spaces; taverns, cobblers, cutlers, smelters, victuallers and milliners, all left evidence of their trades. However as time passed, the quality of life in these spaces deteriorated. The bridge which had never been waterproofed due to it being built on such a tight budget began to leak and the businesses were slowly forced to move out. Several years passed during which time the function of these spaces began to change.

In the absence of legal trade and licensed businesses, the dark, damp wet vaults started to become home to only the very poorest and most disreputable sections of society. This included immigrant Irishmen and Highlanders seeking refuge from the clearances, mercenary landlords, and even body snatchers!

While little documentary evidence exists to support this theory - (technically, these people weren’t supposed to be there in the first place) - when the vaults were eventually excavated several corners revealed “middens”* containing household items such as old toys, broken medicine bottles, clay pipes, buttons, horse shoes, snuff boxes, cracked stoneware and ceramic jars, pots and plates; all visible signs of dwelling and inhabitation.

Even so, long after the workshops and businesses moved out and its new residents moved in, the vaults started to become completely unusable. A lack of light, air, heat, ventilation and sanitation and a slow, steady seepage of water through the cracks in the bridge made these areas not only impractical, but uninhabitable and within 30 years of the bridge opening, the abandonment of the Vaults was more or less complete.

The vaults were filled in with rubble, both for security for the businesses still operating above on street level and also to discourage squatters making home in what was effectively a place to die, not to live… and so the vaults fell into the dim distant memory of generations past.

However, in 1985, these long, lost, forgotten spaces came to public attention after a chance excavation revealed the labyrinth network of rooms and dwelling spaces contained within. These spaces have lost none of their original atmosphere. They are still dark, occasionally claustrophobic and, when it rains in Edinburgh they can still be very damp. The Vaults today ooze memories of the past, their stones seep water as well as stories, invoking memory and provoking the imagination.



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Venue information

This event is held at Niddry Street Vaults Edinburgh, Edinburgh.
For full details of the location, venue reviews, photos and location maps, see the Niddry Street Vaults Edinburgh venue page »

Entry Prices

Minimum age: 18
Last entry: 12:00pm
Entry price (public): 35.00
Entry price (members/NUS): 30.00
Doors open: 00:00 til 06:15

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