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Latitude: 55.9542 / 55°57'14"N
Longitude: -3.2015 / 3°12'5"W
OS Eastings: 325076
OS Northings: 674110
OS Grid: NT250741
Mapcode National: GBR 8MF.02
Mapcode Global: WH6SL.SLPT
Plus Code: 9C7RXQ3X+MC
Entry Name: 39 and 39a Queen Street and 64 and 66 Frederick Street with Railings
Listing Date: 3 March 1966
Category: A
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 369585
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB29554
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Edinburgh, 64, 66 Frederick Street
ID on this website: 200369585
1789; earlier 19th century shopfronts. 3-storey on raised basement and attic classical tenement on corner site, with shops at ground. Droved cream sandstone ashlar with polished dressings. Long and short rusticated quoins; eaves cornice. Painted timber shopfronts (as ashlar) with full entablature.
QUEEN STREET ELEVATION: 5-bay. Pair of 3- and 2-bay shops at pavement/raised basement level; inset entrances framed by quadrant columns, with 2-leaf panelled storm doors; that at 39a with panelled and glazed inner door with bevelled glass. Pair of large piend-roofed canted dormers.
FREDERICK STREET ELEVATION: broad irregular 4-bay gable with single bay to S. Shop on corner at basement to right. Steps to 2 doors to 2 left bays of gable; that to right (No 66) larger, to ground floor flat with splayed reveals, pilasters, fluted frieze with rosettes and cornice; 9-panelled door with plate glass fanlight; that to left (No 64) to common stair, architraved and corniced; pair of full-sized windows to gablehead. Bay to left with canted oriel window at ground with cornice and blocking course; bipartite slate-hung box dormer.
Timber sash and case 12-pane windows (plate glass to Queen Street at ground, and oriel). Aslar coped skews; stone stacks; grey slates.
INTERIOR: shops plain or modernised. Ground floor flat (No 66) with internal steps making up level to hallway with fluted pilastered arch; 2 rooms to Queen Street - 2-bay to W with sideboard recess facing window, framed by fluted pilasters and festooned frieze, with plaster panelled walls, panelled dado and simple carved chimneypiece - 3-bay to E with further window on E wall next to neo-Greek chimneypiece, panelled dado; room with oriel window with fine carved chimnepiece with panelled pilasters bearing urns and central foliate panel; further small room with festooned chimneypiece.
RAILINGS: cast-iron railings.
Built by Robert Wright and James Tait. A significant surviving part of the original fabric of Edinburgh?s New Town, one of the most important and best preserved examples of urban planning in Britain; Queen Street was built to take advantage of the northern views, and has survived remarkably unaltered to this day.
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