Built around 1741, Sciennes Hill House was originally a substantial three-story town house set in a large garden. It was partly demolished in 1868, the remaining parts of the structure being incorporated into a terrace of Victorian
tenements which now make up the north side of Sciennes House Place. The north elevation was the original front of the house. This still contains some of the original architectural features but these are not visible from the street. The street frontage was originally the back of the house. The interior of the building was sympathetically restored in 1988. In the winter of 1786–87, the house was the location of the only recorded meeting of
Robert Burns and
Walter Scott, at a literary dinner hosted by the philosopher Professor
Adam Ferguson. A bronze plaque on the outside of the building commemorates the event. Sciennes House Place is also the location of the Old Jewish Burial Ground, the first
Jewish cemetery in Scotland. It was opened in 1816 by the Edinburgh Hebrew Congregation and closed to burials in 1870. Some of the memorials, inscribed in
Hebrew, show up to four generations of some families buried here. Also in Sciennes House Place is the Old Braid
Fire Station, a Category C
listed building which was designed in 1885 by Robert Morham, the City Architect. This was one of four fire stations established in the 1820s by Edinburgh's first firemaster
James Braidwood. It is now an architect's office. Robert Morham also designed, in 1884, the former 'A' Division
Police Station on the corner of Causewayside. This is a four-storey building in the
Scottish Baronial style. It closed in the early 1980s and has since been converted to flats. The building stands opposite the shop of the antique dealer and police historian
T W Archibald who wrote a history of the
Lothians and Borders Police. The former
Royal Hospital for Sick Children (commonly referred to as the
Sick Kids) is an imposing neo-Jacobean building, designed by
George Washington Browne. It operated at its site in Sciennes Road from 1895 to 2021. It is a listed building with murals by
Phoebe Anna Traquair in its
mortuary chapel. In 2017, the hospital was due to move to
Little France, but this was delayed because of technical and financial problems. In February 2019, planning permission was given to the Downing Group to convert the main hospital building to 126 residential units and to replace other buildings on the site with student flats. The hospital finally closed on 23 March 2021 when its facilities moved to the new Royal Hospital for Children and Young People at Little France. The Downing Group started work on the redevelopment of the site in June 2021.
Sciennes Primary School stands next to the former hospital. It was designed in 1889 by
Robert Wilson, the architect for the Edinburgh Board of Education, and opened in 1892. Sylvan House is an 18th-century Category B listed residential building situated behind a row of Victorian tenements in Sylvan Place. In the 1790s, it was the summer home of
Joseph Black, Professor of Chemistry at Edinburgh University. A plaque commemorating Black's occupancy was unveiled in 1991. ==Notable residents==