Latitude: 55.9504 / 55°57'1"N
Longitude: -3.1898 / 3°11'23"W
OS Eastings: 325797
OS Northings: 673683
OS Grid: NT257736
Mapcode National: GBR 8PG.CF
Mapcode Global: WH6SL.ZP6P
Plus Code: 9C7RXR26+53
Entry Name: 22-24 Cockburn Street, Edinburgh
Listing Name: 22 and 24 Cockburn Street
Listing Date: 12 December 1974
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 370855
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB30088
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Edinburgh, 22-24 Cockburn Street
ID on this website: 200370855
Location: Edinburgh
County: Edinburgh
Town: Edinburgh
Electoral Ward: City Centre
Traditional County: Midlothian
Tagged with: Architectural structure Art gallery
Peddie and Kinnear, Architects, 1859-61. 3-storey and attic 3-bay symmetrical Baronial tenement with gallery to ground floor. Squared and snecked lightly stugged ashlar with polished dressings. Moulded string course between ground and 1st floors (linked to that of No 22 to right); stepped cill course to 2nd floor; shallow corbel table to attic. Windows in stop-chamfered surrounds. Stone-mullioned bipartite windows to centre bay. 3 gabled dormers to attic, that to centre larger, with finialled skews.
Modern plate glass front to gallery at ground floor; 4-pane glazing in timber sash and case windows.
A Group comprises 1-63 (Odd Nos) and 2-6 and 18-56 (Even Nos) Cockburn Street. Known briefly as Lord Cockburn Street, Cockburn Street was named after the doyen of conservationists, Lord Cockburn, who died in 1854. It was built by the High Street and Railway Station Access Company, under the Railway Station Acts of 1853 and 1860, to provide access to Waverley Station from the High Street. The serpentine curve of the street (anticipated in Thomas Hamilton's Victoria Street) gives a gradient of not more than 1:14; James Peddie and Henry J Wylie were the engineers. One of the aims of the design was to conceal the diagonal line of the street from Princes Street. A watercolour perspective drawing of the street by John Laing, published in THE BUILDER of 1860, shows how this was to be achieved. Stylistically, the intention was 'to preserve as far as possible the architectural style and antique character of the locality.' Peddie and Kinnear's Cockburn Street designs are an innovative adaptation (much imitated later) of the Scots Baronial style, previously used by Burn and Bryce in country houses, to the urban situation, with shops and tenements enlivened by crowstepped gables, corbelling and turrets.
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