Aberdeen, United Kingdom
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Obar Dheathain (Scottish Gaelic); historically known as the Granite City and Silver City with the Golden Sands
Built almost entirely from locally quarried silver-grey granite — a material that gives the city its distinctive, austere, and in the right light genuinely beautiful appearance — Aberdeen is Scotland's third city, the oil capital of Europe, a medieval university city of great distinction, and the gateway to Royal Deeside and the Cairngorms. The combination of North Sea petroleum wealth, academic tradition, and the raw grandeur of the surrounding landscape has produced a city of considerable self-confidence and surprising cultural depth. The energy industry transformed Aberdeen from a prosperous fishing and granite-quarrying centre into one of the most internationally connected cities in Scotland from the early 1970s onward. The North Sea oil boom brought global companies, well-paid engineers and executives from across the world, and the kind of cosmopolitan service economy — international restaurants, upscale hotels, a sophisticated bar scene — that would otherwise be unexpected in a city of this size and latitude. Union Street — the main commercial spine, running dead-straight through the city's granite heart — is lined with the characteristic grey stone buildings that earned the city its nicknames. The Union Terrace Gardens, recently redesigned, are the civic green lung. Aberdeen's two universities — the University of Aberdeen (founded 1495, one of the five ancient Scottish universities) and Robert Gordon University — give the city a substantial student presence and cultural energy. The Belmont Filmhouse, the Aberdeen Arts Centre, His Majesty's Theatre, and the Art Gallery (recently refurbished, holding an excellent collection including important Scottish Colourists) provide a cultural calendar disproportionate to the city's size. The food and drink scene benefits from extraordinary local produce: Aberdeen Angus beef, North Sea fish and shellfish (Peterhead, just north, is one of Europe's largest fish markets), Speyside whisky within easy reach, and the soft fruits of the Tayside farms are the cornerstones of a larder that has attracted serious restaurant talent. The Justice Mill Lane area and the lanes around Belmont Street have the best concentration of independent bars and restaurants. Royal Deeside — the valley of the River Dee running west into the Cairngorms, the location of Balmoral Castle (the royal family's Scottish residence) and a succession of castles, distilleries, and granite villages — is one of Scotland's most beautiful landscapes and accessible within 45 minutes.
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Population
168,000
Weather
Occupying a headland on Scotland's northeast coast where the rivers Dee and Don meet the North Sea, Aberdeen has one of the coolest and most exposed climates of any British city. Its northerly latitude (57°N) and North Sea position bring cold easterly winds, relatively low sunshine, significant winter cold, and a summer that is mild rather than warm — though also bringing the extraordinary long northern daylight of a Scottish summer. Spring (March–May): 4–13°C (39–55°F). Cold and often blustery. Daylight increases dramatically. The coastal light in clear spring weather has a clarity and blue intensity remarkable even by Scottish standards. Summer (June–August): 11–19°C (52–66°F). Mild with long days — midsummer dusk approaches midnight. Sunshine when it comes is bright and energising. Sea haar (coastal fog) can roll in from the North Sea even on otherwise fine days. Autumn (September–November): 7–14°C (45–57°F). Cooling quickly. October storms from the North Sea can be fierce. The Dee valley and Cairngorms to the west show superb foliage. Winter (December–February): 1–7°C (34–45°F). Cold, often stormy, with snow falling several times per season. The North Sea grey is pervasive but the city's granite gleams silver in winter frost.