This collection of innovative essays celebrates the New Town of Edinburgh over the 250 years since its original creation. The contributing authors discuss the intellectual, economic and political contexts which provided the impetus for the city of Edinburgh to expand north of the Old Town, and analyse the New Towns unique architectural status in terms of its size, monumentality and degree of preservation. For centuries, Scotland has pursued innovation, improvement, commerce and contact with England and the Continent; and since medieval times it has been an urbanising land of planned towns. This book reflects on the constantly changing dialogue between Edinburghs Old and New Towns, from the eighteenth century to the present time, as the city became increasingly commercialised. It also compares Edinburghs New Town with more recent new towns elsewhere, notably nineteenth-century Dunedin in New Zealand and Scotlands planned new-town movement of the twentieth century. The age of conservation is another of the central themes