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Latitude: 57.1646 / 57°9'52"N
Longitude: -2.9659 / 2°57'57"W
OS Eastings: 341682
OS Northings: 808608
OS Grid: NJ416086
Mapcode National: GBR WJ.2P94
Mapcode Global: WH7N1.D5XW
Plus Code: 9C9V527M+RM
Entry Name: Birkhill
Listing Name: Tillypronie, Nether Birkhill
Listing Date: 25 November 1980
Category: C
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 341714
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB9443
Building Class: Cultural
ID on this website: 200341714
Location: Logie-Coldstone
County: Aberdeenshire
Electoral Ward: Aboyne, Upper Deeside and Donside
Parish: Logie-Coldstone
Traditional County: Aberdeenshire
Tagged with: Cottage
Earlier 19th century. Single storey and attic, 3-bay, rectangular-plan Cottage-Ornee with half-piended roof and overhanging eaves with exposed rafters. Squared red granite courses, roughly pointed with concrete.
S (PRINCIPAL) ELEVATION: 3-bay, 2-pane glazed upper door to centre, single window to bay to left. Half-gabled bay to right, broad window to ground, small square window to gablehead.
N (REAR) ELEVATION: half-gabled bay to left, elevation obscured by flat-roofed modern addition.
(SIDE) ELEVATION: blank gable end, tall wallhead stack breaking eaves.
W (SIDE) ELEVATION: single window to centre of gable end.
Modern, fixed pane plate glass windows. Grey slates, lead flashing.
INTERIOR: not seen 2002
Possible sources for the cottage's design can be found in the profusion of villa pattern books published in the early nineteenth century. The asymmetrical design and the roof's oversailing eaves suggest publications such as Robert Lugar's The Country Gentleman's Architect, 1807 and Architectural Sketches for Cottages, Rural Dwellings and Villas, 1811 or John Claudius Loudon's A Treatise on Forming, Improving and Managing Country Residences, 1806. Particular attention appears to have been paid to John Plaw's Sketches for Country Houses, Villas and Rural Dwellings published in 1800. The villas illustrated in Plates II and XXXVIII both continue the pattern of hipped roof and overhanging or sailing eave, typical of the emerging
Picturesque or Cottage Ornee style most famously typified by the villas of John Nash, for example Cronkhill, Salop, 1802. Probably originally associated with the Tillypronie estate.
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