THE LOOP

#Culture

Every Culture story from The Loop, newest first.

Friday 17 July 2026 Princes Street is shut. The carnival is going anyway. The fire that gutted the former Debenhams on Princes Street has closed a central section of Edinburgh's most famous thoroughfare until at least August. The Festival Carnival is rerouting rather than retreating, and that says something worth noting as the summer season opens. Thursday 16 July 2026 50 Varieties, Half of Them Nowhere Else in Edinburgh: The Big Cheese Opens on Broughton Street in August An Edinburgh couple are opening an independent cheese shop on Broughton Street on 1 August. The Big Cheese will launch with 50 varieties from Scotland, the UK, and continental Europe, with around half reportedly unavailable anywhere else in the city. It's the kind of genuinely local, genuinely specialist retail that Broughton Street does well. Wednesday 15 July 2026 Growth Guarantee Scheme Expanded: Billions in Backed Loans Now Available to Scottish SMEs Rachel Reeves has widened the Growth Guarantee Scheme, unlocking billions in government-backed lending for small businesses across the UK. For Scottish SMEs who've hit a wall with conventional finance, this is worth ten minutes of your time today. Wednesday 15 July 2026 Edinburgh Locals Get Cut-Price Entry to Fringe and Folk & Food Festival, Here's How to Claim It If you live in Edinburgh, you don't have to pay full whack to enjoy the city's best summer cultural events. Discounted tickets are available for both the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and the Edinburgh Folk & Food Festival, and most locals have no idea they exist. Tuesday 14 July 2026 Two Edinburgh siblings just made the Fringe less terrifying, and there's a lesson in it for every local business A brother and sister design duo have built an interactive map that lets Fringe-goers filter every show in Edinburgh by location, genre, price, and child-suitability. It's exactly the kind of tool the festival has needed for years. The fact that it took two locals with a good idea, not a committee, to build it says something worth sitting with. Monday 13 July 2026 Shirley Manson, Edinburgh Castle, and a Haar-Soaked Farewell That Nobody Wanted to Be the Last Garbage played Edinburgh Castle at the weekend, and frontwoman Shirley Manson hinted it might be her final hometown show. The haar had other ideas about making it a soft, golden send-off. Edinburgh does what Edinburgh does. Friday 10 July 2026 Forty jobs gone as Glasgow electrical contractor folds after nearly two decades, a warning shot for Scottish construction supply chains A Glasgow electrical contracting firm has collapsed into administration, taking around 40 jobs with it and putting another name on a growing list of Scottish building services businesses that couldn't survive the current squeeze. Joint administrators from Interpath Advisory are now picking through the wreckage. If you work in construction, trade services, or supply into that sector, this one is worth paying attention to. Friday 10 July 2026 Leith Lands £60,000 as One of 15 UK Town of Culture Shortlistees, Here's What That Means for Local Business Out of nearly 400 applications, Leith has made the cut for the UK Government's Town of Culture 2028 competition, securing £60,000 to develop its bid. For Edinburgh's creative businesses, traders, and venue owners, this is not a background story, it's a live funding pipeline with your name on it. Friday 10 July 2026 Fife's anti-tank cubes held a secret for 80 years: the names, slogans, and cartoons of the men who built them Archaeologists recording WW2 coastal defences at Tentsmuir in Fife have found something the official record never captured: the soldiers themselves. Carved names, a slogan, and a cartoon etched into concrete anti-tank cubes are now being formally documented for the first time. It is a small discovery with a quietly enormous human weight. Thursday 09 July 2026 Ninety Years of Bucket Seats and Bothy Suppers: Scotland's Favourite Strips Come Home This July Oor Wullie and The Broons turn 90 this month, and the National Library of Scotland is marking it properly. Pop-up celebrations land in Edinburgh, Glasgow, and Dundee the weekend of 24 to 26 July, rare originals, archive material, and a reminder that Scotland's most enduring storytelling has always punched well above its weight. Wednesday 08 July 2026 Leith Theatre drops off the UK's At-Risk Register After Nine Years, Edinburgh's Slow-Burn Success Story One of Edinburgh's most-loved cultural spaces has finally been removed from Theatres Trust's 2026 Theatres at Risk Register, nearly a decade after it first appeared. It's a genuine win for the community and volunteers who refused to let the building go. Three other Scottish venues are still on the list, and one has deteriorated further. Tuesday 07 July 2026 Leith Theatre Off the At-Risk Register: A Leith Landmark Comes Back to Life After years on the Theatres Trust's national watch list, Leith Theatre has been removed from the UK's Theatres at Risk Register. It's a genuine milestone for one of Edinburgh's most storied buildings, and a reminder of what sustained community effort can actually achieve. Monday 06 July 2026 Neil Hannon Walks Into Usher Hall and Reminds Everyone Why Live Culture Still Matters The Divine Comedy delivered a five-star show at Edinburgh's Usher Hall this week, with Neil Hannon in dark pinstripes and darker sunglasses pulling three decades of material into a single, apparently effortless evening. With the Fringe weeks away, it's a timely reminder that Edinburgh's live culture scene is one of the city's most powerful economic assets. And if you run a business here, that's not just nice, it's useful. Friday 03 July 2026 Turner Prize Winner Puts the Clyde at the Centre of Glasgow 2026, and the Foot Traffic Will Follow Jasleen Kaur, the Glasgow-raised artist who took the Turner Prize in 2023, is creating new sculptures along the River Clyde as part of the Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games Festival. It is the kind of cultural commission that draws crowds, generates column inches, and quietly rewires how visitors and locals experience a city. For Scottish businesses, the question is: are you positioned to benefit? Thursday 02 July 2026 Claude Science is Anthropic's newest flagship product At an event for pharmaceutical executives, biotech founders, and researchers on Tuesday, Anthropic announced Claude Science, a major new product intended to support scientific research in the same way that Claude Code su Thursday 02 July 2026 EIFF, films galore await audiences in August, tickets on sale from Thursday The 2026 Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF) returns this August with one of its most exciting programmes in years, peppered with stars from Ewan McGregor to Kenneth Branagh, as the 79th edition prepares to take Wednesday 01 July 2026 Life-Sized Lego Animals Land at Edinburgh Zoo This Summer, and the Visitor Economy Wins Edinburgh Zoo has opened Bricktastic Beasts, a new trail of life-sized Lego sculptures featuring penguins, lions, gorillas, and more. It is the kind of addition that keeps families in the city longer and spending closer to home, worth knowing if your business sits anywhere near the visitor economy. Tuesday 30 June 2026 Edinburgh Named Second Most Beautiful City on Earth, Here's the Business Case for Caring Time Out has ranked Edinburgh second most beautiful city in the world, with more than 80% of locals backing the verdict. That kind of global recognition is not just civic pride, for Edinburgh's hospitality, retail, and creative businesses, it is a marketing asset hiding in plain sight. Monday 29 June 2026 Dolly the Sheep Turns 30: Scotland's Most Famous Science Experiment Is Still the Best Argument for Scottish Innovation She was born on 5 July 1996 at the Roslin Institute just outside Edinburgh, and she changed biology forever. Three decades on, Dolly the sheep sits in a glass case on Chambers Street, and Scotland's record of world-first research is still being written. Friday 26 June 2026 Amazon's £30,000 Creative Grants Are Back, And Edinburgh Organisations Should Move Now The Amazon Regional Creatives Fund is open again for 2026, offering grants of up to £30,000 to Edinburgh-based charities, CICs, and CIOs that develop creative projects with community impact. This is a live funding opportunity with a real deadline, not a vague promise. If you run or work with a not-for-profit in the city, this is worth your next thirty minutes. Friday 26 June 2026 Netflix Returns to Leith: Dept. Q Season Two Is Rolling, and Edinburgh's Creative Economy Is Watching Production has started on the second series of Dept. Q, the critically acclaimed crime thriller that put Edinburgh streets in front of a global Netflix audience. For Leith businesses and Scotland's screen sector, this is more than a good story. It's a economic signal worth paying attention to. Thursday 25 June 2026 North Berwick Traders Claim £1,000-a-Day Losses as Council Parking Charges Bite New parking charges in North Berwick are hitting independent traders hard, with some reporting losses of up to £1,000 a day since the scheme launched. The council has rejected a pause on the charges, leaving business owners to absorb the damage. This is the parking policy story every Scottish high street SME should be watching. Thursday 25 June 2026 Leith-Built Show Garden Finds a Permanent Home at Victoria Park After Community Fundraise A garden that won plaudits at a Yorkshire flower show is now rooted in Edinburgh for good. Drakkar's Drift, designed by Leith's Luke Coleman, opened permanently at Victoria Park on Sunday, brought home by a community that decided not to let it disappear. This is what local pride looks like when it gets organised. Wednesday 24 June 2026 Edinburgh Zoo's Newest Penguin Is Named McGinn, and He's Already Got a Left Flipper Worth Watching Scotland's first World Cup goal in 28 years deserved a proper monument. Edinburgh Zoo obliged. The Royal Zoological Society of Scotland has named a gentoo penguin chick after midfielder John McGinn, and honestly, it's the most Edinburgh thing to happen this summer. Tuesday 23 June 2026 Born Slippy, Born Again: Underworld Headline Hogmanay In The Gardens Thirty Years On The act whose pounding bassline defined a generation of Scottish cinema is coming home for New Year's Eve. Underworld headline Edinburgh's Hogmanay In The Gardens, and for city businesses, the timing couldn't be better. Monday 22 June 2026 Lumo posts the UK's biggest rail passenger surge, 23% up on the Edinburgh-London run The budget rail operator connecting Edinburgh and London has recorded the largest increase in passenger numbers of any UK train company in the past year. For Scottish SMEs who run the corridor regularly for clients, pitches, and supplier meetings, that growth tells a story worth paying attention to. Monday 22 June 2026 Asbestos in China-Sourced Turbine Parts: Scotland's Renewables Supply Chain Has a Problem Worth Naming Wind turbine components imported from China have tested positive for asbestos, raising serious questions about procurement standards across the UK's energy supply chain. For Scotland, where offshore and onshore wind is the backbone of the energy transition, this is not an abstract concern. It lands on the desks of developers, contractors, and the SMEs who supply them. Monday 22 June 2026 Fountainbridge Fills Up: Edinburgh's Canal Festival Pulls a Crowd on a Rare Sunny Saturday Thousands turned out to Lochrin Basin and Fountainbridge Green for Edinburgh's annual Canal Festival, a five-hour celebration of community, water, and summer. Schools, local groups, and a healthy dose of Scottish sunshine made it one of the warmest afternoons the area has seen in a while. If you missed it, make a note for next year. Friday 19 June 2026 An Edinburgh Postbox Gets a Woolly McTominay, and the City's World Cup Mood Is Unmistakable Someone in Edinburgh picked up their needles, recreated Scott McTominay's overhead kick in yarn, and fixed it to a postbox for the whole city to find. Nobody knows who. Nobody needs to. This is exactly what a city that's actually buzzing looks like. Thursday 18 June 2026 Scottish Fleet Operators Are Using 12 Months of GPS Data to Pick the Right Vans for Electric, Here's How to Do the Same Replacing a diesel van with an electric one is a decent bet. Replacing the wrong van with one is an expensive mistake. Scottish fleet operators are now running a year of real GPS data through analytics tools before they spend a penny, and the method is one any SME with two or more vehicles should know about. Thursday 18 June 2026 Enchanted Forest Distributes Record £134,044 to 36 Highland Perthshire Groups in Its 25th Year Scotland's best-known outdoor light event has quietly built one of the more effective community funding models in the country. In its 25th anniversary year, the Enchanted Forest's charity arm is handing out more money than ever before, and the mechanics of how it does it are worth understanding. Thursday 18 June 2026 Siblings, Sixty Years Apart, and a Fringe Story Worth Catching: Goodbye Dandelion Lands at the Underbelly in August A new Edinburgh Festival Fringe show about an unlikely friendship between a pensioner and someone five decades her junior opens at the Underbelly from 5 to 30 August. Written by the team behind the warmly received 2018 show Pickle Jar, it stars two real-life siblings. If your August marketing still has a gap, this is the kind of story Edinburgh does better than anywhere. Wednesday 17 June 2026 Dumfries Mental Health Archive Joins UNESCO's Memory of the World, and Scotland Should Be Proud The records of the Crichton Royal Institution, a former psychiatric hospital in Dumfries that pioneered humane mental health care, have been added to UNESCO's Memory of the World Register. It is one of the most significant heritage recognitions a Scottish institution can receive. Here is why it matters beyond the archive itself. Tuesday 16 June 2026 Swinney Heads to Kentucky to Fight for Scotch: What a Tariff Deal Would Mean for Scottish SMEs Scotland's First Minister is in the United States pressing bourbon producers and trade officials to back the removal of American tariffs on Scotch whisky. With the sector worth over £5 billion in annual exports, and thousands of Scottish SMEs tied to the supply chain, this is not a diplomatic photo opportunity. It is a commercial fight that matters. Tuesday 16 June 2026 Fringe Central Gets a Second Home on Infirmary Street, and the August Economy Just Got a New Anchor Point The Edinburgh Festival Fringe has opened a permanent new hub on Infirmary Street, adding to its High Street base and giving performers, crew, and visitors a dedicated gathering space. For Edinburgh businesses planning around the August rush, this is a new footfall magnet worth mapping into your summer strategy now. Monday 15 June 2026 UK Eyes Social Media Ban for Under-16s, Scottish Schools, Edtech Firms, and Youth Marketers Need to Pay Attention Now Westminster is moving toward banning social media access for children under 16, following Australia's landmark legislation that came into force earlier this year. If it passes, it reshapes how Scottish schools talk to families, how edtech businesses reach young users, and how any SME with a youth-facing brand builds its digital presence. Monday 15 June 2026 Scotland Beat Haiti. The Pubs Lost Their Minds. And Edinburgh Remembered How to Celebrate. For the first time since 1989, Scotland won a World Cup match. Bars across the country filled up in the early hours, and for one glorious morning, nobody was talking about interest rates or energy bills. Some moments are just for enjoying. Friday 12 June 2026 From Greyfriars to the Big Screen: Edinburgh's Sean Dunn Makes His Debut with Peter Mullan A cape-wearing stranger, a famous grave, and a spark of dark comedy. Edinburgh director Sean Dunn has turned a chance encounter in Greyfriars Kirkyard into a feature debut starring one of Scotland's finest actors. This is what Edinburgh creative ambition looks like when it gets off the ground. Thursday 11 June 2026 Capacity Crowds, Full Venues, Rural Till Ringing: Portsoy's Haal Festival Proves Small Towns Can Pull Big Numbers Folk at the Salmon Bothy's Haal festival has wrapped another sell-out weekend in Portsoy, with concerts, sessions, and workshops all reporting increased attendance. It's a reminder that community-rooted cultural events don't just warm the soul, they move serious money through rural Scottish economies. Wednesday 10 June 2026 The DeLorean Is Coming to Edinburgh, And It Won't Cost You a Penny A free outdoor cinema event this weekend brings the most famous car in film history to the Scottish capital. It's the kind of thing Edinburgh does quietly brilliantly, and your customers will thank you for telling them about it. Tuesday 09 June 2026 Edinburgh's Visitor Levy Puts £132k Into Bringing the Festival Carnival Back to the Streets For the first time since 2023, the Festival Carnival parade returns to Edinburgh's city streets, funded directly by the Visitor Levy. It's a small but telling sign that the tourist tax is starting to do what its supporters always promised: put money back into the city's cultural life. Monday 08 June 2026 A Sinkhole Swallowed Half a Chip Shop's Trade Overnight, And It Could Happen to Any of Us When a road collapses outside your front door, you don't get a warning. Rudi Miroli, owner of a Scottish chip shop, has watched his turnover drop by 50% since emergency works shut the street. It's a sharp reminder that infrastructure risk is a real business risk, and most small operators aren't covered for it. Monday 08 June 2026 Heriot-Watt Student's Tartan Picked by Scottish Government to Mark America's 250th, Soft Power, Woven In Kaci McEwan, a textile design student at Heriot-Watt University, has had her tartan chosen from five shortlisted entries to represent Scotland's cultural ties with the United States as America turns 250. It's a small story with a long thread: Scottish craft, international diplomacy, and a young designer getting a career-defining platform. Sunday 07 June 2026 Thousands Pack The Meadows for Edinburgh's Best Free Day Out, And Kate Bush Came Too The Meadows Festival returned in 2026 with its usual combination of community warmth, free entry, and the kind of joyful Edinburgh chaos that no marketing budget could manufacture. This year's standout moment: hundreds of people dressed as Kate Bush, dancing. Obviously. Saturday 06 June 2026 AI Colour-Codes the Body in Real Time During Surgery, and the NHS Just Ran Its First UK Trial Surgeons at St Mark's Hospital in London have used an AI tool that maps and colour-codes human anatomy live during an operation, a UK first that puts machine vision inside the operating theatre. For NHS Scotland, which has been quietly building its digital health infrastructure, this is the kind of clinical AI that changes outcomes, not just workflows. Here's what happened, and why it matters north of the border. Saturday 06 June 2026 Edinburgh Property Entrepreneur Restructures Four Firms Under One Roof, Here's Why More Scottish SMEs Should Think This Way Richard O'Donnell has folded four specialist businesses into a single holding structure, Property Repair Group. It's a quiet but significant move, and the thinking behind it applies to any Scottish founder running more than one thing at once. Saturday 06 June 2026 Neighbourgood Market Takes the Ross Bandstand This Summer, and City Centre Footfall Will Follow The Stockbridge community market that built its reputation on locally-made goods and a proper neighbourhood feel has landed one of Edinburgh's most iconic outdoor venues for summer 2025. If you run a business near Princes Street Gardens, this is worth putting in your diary now. Friday 05 June 2026 St Giles' Cathedral Goes Ticketed From September, Free for Scots, Charged for Tourists One of Edinburgh's most visited landmarks is introducing an entry fee for international and UK tourists this autumn, while keeping the doors open free to Scottish residents. It's a smart funding model, and it quietly shifts the footfall calculus for every business on the Royal Mile.