, home to the French Consulate-General on George IV Bridge At the north end of the street, on the east side, where it joins the
Royal Mile (Lawnmarket), stands
Lothian Chambers which is now the offices of French Consulate-General. Opposite it, on the west side, was a row of Category B listed
tenements at 1–12 Melbourne Place, demolished in 1966–67 to make way for an additional office building for Midlothian County Council, designed in 1968 by
Robert Matthew of
Robert Matthew Johnson Marshall partners but cleared away to make way for a new hotel development originally for
Missoni, but now the G & V Hotel. Further south on the street lie the
National Library of Scotland and (opposite) the
Edinburgh Central Library, the latter being one of the many free libraries constructed with money provided by the Scottish-born philanthropist
Andrew Carnegie. Around the middle of the street, where the bridge crosses the historic
Cowgate, are located a number of bars and restaurants and takeaways, as well as the
ESL institute Wallace College and the
Augustine United Church. The former Elim Pentecostal Church has been converted to a public house. At the southern end of the street is the junction with Candlemaker Row, where there is the statue of
Greyfriars Bobby. Opposite is the junction with
Chambers Street, where the
National Museum of Scotland is located. The road continues south for a short section, not truly part of the bridge and formerly known as Lindsay Place, to a Y-junction where it diverges to become Bristo Place and Forrest Road, the
Bedlam Theatre (formerly the New North Free Church) sits at the meeting point of these two roads. ==See also==