Latitude: 55.9713 / 55°58'16"N
Longitude: -3.2092 / 3°12'33"W
OS Eastings: 324626
OS Northings: 676025
OS Grid: NT246760
Mapcode National: GBR 8K6.FY
Mapcode Global: WH6SL.P50P
Plus Code: 9C7RXQCR+G8
Entry Name: Gate Lodge, Trinity Cottage, Ferry Road, Edinburgh
Listing Name: Ferry Road, Former Trinity Cottage, Boundary Walls, Gates and Lodge
Listing Date: 30 January 1981
Category: C
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 367257
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB28749
Building Class: Cultural
ID on this website: 200367257
Location: Edinburgh
County: Edinburgh
Town: Edinburgh
Electoral Ward: Inverleith
Traditional County: Midlothian
Tagged with: Architectural structure
Mid 19th century. Ashlar-coped rubble boundary walls, heightened with aggregate (clinker/stone, see Notes), to Ferry Road, curving round corner to South Trinity Road. Hemicycle facing end of Inverleith Row, with central carriage gates and flanking pedestrian gates; square section ashlar gatepiers with cornices and pyramidal caps; original cast-iron gates. 2 further footgates to W with similar piers. Single storey lodge at W of gate. Coursed rubble with droved ashlar dressings. Piend-roofed; bracketed eaves; entrance (blocked) in central bay with timber gable to porch; flanking windows (blocked); piend-roofed extension to rear with bipartite window (blocked). Graded grey slates; tall ashlar stacks with circular cans.
Trinity Cottage was one of the 1st generation of Trinity villas, appearing on John Ainslie's map of 1804. The gates and walls of several of these early villas remain as reminders of this era of Trinity's history. It was substantially altered by the Currie family (Leith ship-owners) in the late 19th century, and later used as their business premises, before being demolished in 1970, to be replaced by an office block known as Trinity Park House (Marshall, Morison & Associates, 1971). The hemispherical gates are important as a termination of the vista N down Inverleith Row.
Some sources claim that the material used to heighten the walls is volcanic lava imported from Iceland, some that it is clinker, an industrial waste product. It can be seen incorporated into the high walls of several of Trinity's older villas, for example Strathavon Lodge, 46 Laverockbank Road.
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