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Latitude: 56.4688 / 56°28'7"N
Longitude: -2.8579 / 2°51'28"W
OS Eastings: 347244
OS Northings: 731069
OS Grid: NO472310
Mapcode National: GBR VN.QD4G
Mapcode Global: WH7RD.2NDT
Plus Code: 9C8VF49R+GV
Entry Name: Roycroft, 31 Yewbank Avenue, Broughty Ferry, Dundee
Listing Name: Broughty Ferry, Yewbank Avenue, Roycroft, Including Glasshouse and Sundial
Listing Date: 29 October 1991
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 362352
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB25888
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Dundee, Broughty Ferry, 31 Yewbank Avenue, Roycroft
ID on this website: 200362352
Location: Dundee
County: Dundee
Town: Dundee
Electoral Ward: The Ferry
Traditional County: Angus
Tagged with: House
Charles G Soutar, 1906. 2-storey, 4-bay, basically rectangular-plan, Arts and Crafts cottage-style, house. Harled, mainly ashlar mullions and cills, red tile roof. Windows mainly 4 and 8-pane sash and case, deep swept eaves with plain bargeboards, elongated wallheads stacks and terracotta cans.
S ELEVATION: 3 bays at left linked by timber verandah approached by step with coped walls, cat-slide roof to verandah between flanking, full-height gabled bays; round-headed archway with flanking windows leading to lobby and entrance door, panelled with rectangular leaded lights at top; tripartite flat-roofed dormer. Gabled bay at right with tripartite windows at ground floor. Segmental-archway to balcony with French doors at 1st. Gabled bay at right; full height canted window with timber mullions, jetted and tile hung gablehead; ground floor window and stack at right return. Recessed bay at right; modern window at ground floor, bipartite at 1st.
N ELEVATION: single storey projection at outer left abutting 2-storey advanced gabled bay; door flanking at right, 2 stair windows with rectangular leaded panes; irregular fenestration.
GLASSHOUSE AND SUNDIAL: 2-stage garden building comprised of harled potting shet at ground and glass house above. Bronze sundial inscribed 'Carbet Castle, 1880', divorced from original pedestal.
INTERIOR: Voysey-esque details; hall with inglenook chimneypiece and panelled overmantle; doors with tripartite segmental-arched leaded lights, bracketted shelf at lintel level; staircase and landing with capped posts and pierced love-hearts on some balusters. Bracketted chimneypiece at ground floor room W, similar at 1st floor currently blocked, with segmental overmantle, incorporating 2 fete champetre tapestry panels.
The house was built for the Halley family and evidently named after the Roycroft Press, a venture established in 1893 at East Aurora, New York State, USA by Elbert Hubbard. In this and other ventures Hubbard was something of a disciple of William Morris, establishing his press on the model of morris's Kelmscott Press and expanding it to include various craft workshops. A 1911 copy of Hubbard's nagazine. TRHE PHILISTINE was found in the house, and is in the possession of the current owners (1989).
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