Latitude: 56.0716 / 56°4'17"N
Longitude: -3.461 / 3°27'39"W
OS Eastings: 309150
OS Northings: 687487
OS Grid: NT091874
Mapcode National: GBR 1Y.PGFM
Mapcode Global: WH5QR.TN3B
Plus Code: 9C8R3GCQ+JJ
Entry Name: British Linen Bank, 82 High Street, Dunfermline
Listing Name: 82 High Street and 1 Douglas Street
Listing Date: 19 December 1979
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 362475
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB26007
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Dunfermline, 82 High Street, British Linen Bank
ID on this website: 200362475
Location: Dunfermline
County: Fife
Town: Dunfermline
Electoral Ward: Dunfermline Central
Traditional County: Fife
Tagged with: Bank building
David Cousin, 1874, for British Linen Bank. 3-storey; rectangular-plan; Italianate former bank with Doric entrance porch to High Street elevation and elaborately consoled cornices to 1st floor windows. Polished sandstone ashlar to street elevations; coursed stugged sandstone elsewhere. Base course; semi-rusticated ground floor with frieze and moulded cornice; band course linking 1st floor windows at cill level; pair of band courses to 2nd floor, upper one forming frieze below moulded eaves cornice; to street elevations. Architraved openings to street elevations; segmental-headed windows to each floor (except for canted window); keystones and elaborately consoled cornices to 2nd floor windows; bracketed cills to 2nd floor windows.
S (HIGHT STREET) ELEVATION: 3-bay. Entrance with shallow Doric porch (entablature supported on pair of columns with pilasters set back to either side of doorcase) to left; round-arched doorway with flanking pilasters; earlier 20th century 2-leaf panelled timber door with fanlight. Canted 3-light window to outer right; window to centre. Regular fenestration (window to each bay) to 1st and 2nd floors. Balconies with balustraded parapets to outer 1st floor bays (that to left over porch, that to right over canted ground floor window); flush balustrade to central window.
E (DOUGLAS STREET) ELEVATION: 5-bay. entrance to outer right with ornately scrolled brackets supporting flat hood; segmental-headed doorway with 6-panel timber door. Window to left to each bay (that immediately to left is blocked). 4 bays to right regularly fenestrated to upper floors. Aediculed niche with shell-headed pediment to outer left of 1st floor; rectangular panel with moulded sides above.
N AND W ELEVATIONS: irregularly fenestrated.
Mainly 2-pane timber sash and case windows. Gablehead stacks with band courses and moulded coping, one to each of N, E and W sides; that to E has scrolled shoulders; that to N is gablehead.
INTERIOR: only partially inspected (1988). Entrance to Douglas Street gives onto vestibule with inner doorcase screen; panelled timber door with glazed upper panel of etched glass; narrow flanking lights and rectangular overlight; quarter-turn stone staircase with cast-iron balustrade with decorative pendant bases to rails.
Designed by David Cousin, a pupil of David Bryce, as an Italianate banking house for the British Linen Bank.
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