Latitude: 55.9354 / 55°56'7"N
Longitude: -3.0444 / 3°2'39"W
OS Eastings: 334850
OS Northings: 671868
OS Grid: NT348718
Mapcode National: GBR 2F.Z5YZ
Mapcode Global: WH7V0.62JN
Plus Code: 9C7RWXP4+56
Entry Name: Halkerston, Inveresk Village Road, Inveresk
Listing Name: 22 Inveresk Village Halkerston Lodge with Former Stables, Lamp Standards, Terrace and Retaining Walls
Listing Date: 22 January 1971
Category: A
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 343482
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB10937
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Inveresk, Inveresk Village Road, Halkerston
ID on this website: 200343482
Location: Inveresk
County: East Lothian
Electoral Ward: Musselburgh
Parish: Inveresk
Traditional County: Midlothian
Tagged with: House
Circa 1640. Restored, W Schomberg Scott, 1960.
Unusual square planned house with pyramidal roof; 2-
storey and attic, with basement to W, on falling
ground; 1st floor windows breaking eaves in swept
dormerheads. Sand-coloured harling; regrettable cement
margins.
NE ELEVATION: 4-bay; doorway off-centre to right, 19th
century roll-moulded and corniced surround; 2-leaf
panelled doors and flush panelled inner door. Stair bay
at centre, breaking eaves in gabled crowstepped
stairhead with windows. 2 windows to bays left of centre
at each floor. 1st floor window to outer right.
SW elevation: 2 paired bays of closely grouped windows,
with windows to basement, ground and 1st floor, and
windows to former mural closets at ground and 1st floor;
basement window to left of centre altered as door.
SE ELEVATION: lean-to addition at ground with door to NE
flanked by windows, 4 windows to SE and 2 grouped
closely to SW, echoing those of main elevation. Broad
and shouldered wallhead stack.
NW ELEVATION: 2 ground floor and 1st floor windows to
left, and further small window to former mural closet at
1st floor to outer right. Broad, shouldered wallhead
stack.
Small-pane glazing pattern in sash and case windows.
Grey slates to pyramidal roof, dormerheads and swept
dormers. Harled wallhead and apex stacks.
INTERIOR: largely altered. Stone vaulted basement
retained, with kitchen recess. Stone newel stair.
Chamfered reveals to ashlar door jambs at 1st floor.
Stone corbels at 1st and attic floor. Some bolection
moulded chimneypieces; 18th century panelling.
STABLE: possibly 17th century. Serving as garden shed
(1989). Single storey, rectangular plan, abacking
boundary wall and cottage at Inveresk Lodge to SE.
Sand-coloured harling; crowstepped gables with beak
skewputts. Door to SW; blocked window to NW, and end
stack. Timber stall divisions and hay-hecks retained in
interior.
LAMP STANDARDS: selection of decorative cast-iron lamp
standards with gilded detail, 1 dated 1900, to gardens
at front and rear.
TERRACE AND RETAINING WALLS: 17th century sandstone
rubble walls with harl-pointing to terrace, garden and
roadside; stone steps by terrace walls with ashlar coped
balustrade and ball finials; red brick buttresses.
Simple wrought-iron overthrow to entrance drive.
Probably the oldest building in Inveresk. Built for
John Rynd, merchant, Edinburgh, between 1638 and 1642.
McWilliam identifies the similarity in plan with
Netherlandish farmhouses of the period. There may have
been an earlier property on the site, and possibly the
vaulted basement is a remnant of this. The house was
originally known as Midfield, and only acquired the
present name in 1779 when Helenus Halkerston bought the
property. Apparently Halkerston and Inveresk Lodges are
linked by an underground tunnel.
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
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