A view of the envisioned redesign of the Ross Bandstand in Princes Street Gardens, Edinburgh.

It has been derailed by a dispute between the philanthropist offering to help replace the Ross Bandstand and the city council, the sudden departure of the project’s head of fundraising, and concerns from the heritage sector about its impact on West Princes Street Gardens.

Work on the new Ross Pavilion, which was hoped to be complete by 2019, has been halted amid wrangling over who will be responsible for the gardens. Hotel developer Norman Springford has revealed that design work and fundraising efforts have been “suspended” as a result of a reluctance from the city council to hand over the running of the historic park to his charitable trust.

He said: “We need to get clarity from the council. We can’t raise the funding for the project if we don’t have a say on how the gardens are run. We don’t want to see over-commercialisation. Anything that is done has to be of the highest quality.

Sign up to our daily newsletter The i newsletter cut through the noise Sign up Thanks for signing up! Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting...

A view of the envisioned redesign of the Ross Bandstand in Princes Street Gardens, Edinburgh.

“The council has different agendas, in different areas, depending on who you speak to. We want it to be a public-private partnership.”

Meanwhile, the trust is facing opposition to its plans from long-running heritage watchdog, the Cockburn Association. It wants to kick-start a public debate on the use of spaces in Princes Street Gardens, Festival Square and St Andrew Square for “paid or gated” events.

It has emerged that Marion Williams, the director of fundraising for the Ross Development Trust, left the project several weeks ago. She was hired in March from the Cockburn Association, where she had been director.

A report by new Cockburn director Terry Levinthal states: “There is increasing concern about the management, maintenance and long-term sustainability of public spaces. This is compounded by a blurring of what is public open space and what is private space. The public realm has been attacked by the creeping privatisation of what little remains of public space.”

A view of the envisioned redesign of the Ross Bandstand in Princes Street Gardens, Edinburgh.

A council spokeswoman said: “The redevelopment of the Ross Pavilion will open up West Princes Street Gardens into a space which can be enjoyed by more people, more often, for generations to come.