A key design challenge was the unusual shape of the site, which had previously had three planning permission requests turned down, but lent to the property’s unique skewed appearance with just one external right angle.
“We were living out in the Currie direction, where we thought we had built our forever home,” recalls Andrew, who alongside June has developed small-scale projects across quirky sites in Edinburgh over the last decade.
“When the opportunity came up, right in the centre of town, we thought: ‘Yes, that is the one for us’, so we built the house.”A key design challenge was the unusual shape of the site, which had previously had three planning permission requests turned down, but lent to the property’s unique skewed appearance with just one external right angle.
“We were living out in the Currie direction, where we thought we had built our forever home,” recalls Andrew, who alongside June has developed small-scale projects across quirky sites in Edinburgh over the last decade.
“When the opportunity came up, right in the centre of town, we thought: ‘Yes, that is the one for us’, so we built the house.”
A key design challenge was the unusual shape of the site, which had previously had three planning permission requests turned down, but lent to the property’s unique skewed appearance with just one external right angle. “We were living out in the Currie direction, where we thought we had built our forever home,” recalls Andrew, who alongside June has developed small-scale projects across quirky sites in Edinburgh over the last decade. “When the opportunity came up, right in the centre of town, we thought: ‘Yes, that is the one for us’, so we built the house.”

Prestige property: skewed for sustainable living in the New Town

Sceabhach, the Irish word for “skewed”, is an appropriate name for the impressive architect-designed property at 64 Broughton Road, sat elegantly in the New Town area of the Capital.

From street level in the UNESCO World Heritage Site, the new-build’s mews-style stone facade and slate roof sympathetically compliment the detached villa’s surroundings, yet reveal very little of the ultra-modern interiors hidden away inside.

The house was built in 2021 by Andrew Laing and his wife, June Russell, who hired local Granton Road-based Zone Architects to carefully blueprint a highly energy efficient home for them to live in.