1
Tower on the top
There are many of these type structures on the buildings round Dundee, as this one is on an old insurance building I can only assume that they were for watching for ships coming into harbour that were insured by the company.
Image: © Bill Nicholls
Taken: 29 Mar 2010
0.01 miles
2
Kirkgate, Dundee
From its junction with Seagate.
Image: © Stanley Howe
Taken: 27 Jun 2015
0.02 miles
3
The Town House
On the corner of King Street (left) and Cowgate.
Image: © Richard Webb
Taken: 21 Aug 2009
0.03 miles
4
Cowgate
King Street is on the left, the Cowgate in the centre and St Andrew's Street to the right.
Image: © Anne Burgess
Taken: 30 Jun 2011
0.03 miles
5
The Continental, Dundee
Restaurant and ballroom, part of the now dark King's Theatre. Some of the ground floor of the complex is in use as shops but much of the building is vacant.
Image: © Richard Webb
Taken: 29 Jan 2023
0.03 miles
6
Old Cowgate
These old properties lurk in the midst of new build projects and road schemes, but as they are being advertised as a development opportunity, for how much longer?
Image: © Ian Paterson
Taken: 1 Nov 2011
0.03 miles
7
The Continental Restaurant & Ballroom Dundee
The Continental was a popular meeting for the young people in Dundee and many lifelong matches were made there. The building has quite a bit of history and further reading can be found here: http://www.arthurlloyd.co.uk/Dundee/KingsTheatreDundee.htm
Image: © Mary Rodgers
Taken: 11 Mar 2017
0.03 miles
8
The Chamber suite
That is the name on the door of what looks to be a former Church, will check.
Image: © Bill Nicholls
Taken: 29 Mar 2010
0.03 miles
9
The Town House, King Street
This is one of Dundee city centre's numerous listed buildings. It is currently a pub, but in the 1870s - and presumably for a while after that too, since Historic Scotland say that this was when the company paid for alterations to the 1815 building - it served as the office of a jute manufacturer.
You don't have to read a great deal about Dundee before jute is mentioned. Jute is a coarse fibre, and is pretty much just a more refined version of hessian - both derive from the same plant. The plant comes from the East of India, a region with which Dundee did a great deal of trade back in the days of empire. There is what is described as probably being an urban myth mentioned on a couple of websites as the reason that for decades this city produced almost all of the world's jute. The story goes that the cloth manufacturers of the day couldn't figure out a profitable way to make fabric from the fibres due to them being so coarse. However, Dundee was heavily involved in the whaling industry at the time and at some point somebody spilt some whale oil onto the jute, which had the effect of softening it into a workable condition.
Even when jute manufacturing began in India forty or so years after things took off here, Dundonian expertise was often required to streamline processes and maximize profits, so there was a steady flow of workers making the voyage across to India.
At one point almost half the city's workforce was involved in the jute industry in some way. Women, who were always paid less than men for doing the same job back in the bad old days, were used in high numbers to keep costs down and apparently their unemployed husband's were often disparagingly called 'kettle boilers'!
Image: © Ian Dodds
Taken: 9 Jun 2021
0.03 miles
10
Sugarhouse Wynd, Dundee
Image: © Douglas Nelson
Taken: 20 Nov 2014
0.04 miles