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Latitude: 55.8633 / 55°51'47"N
Longitude: -4.3307 / 4°19'50"W
OS Eastings: 254237
OS Northings: 665798
OS Grid: NS542657
Mapcode National: GBR 03K.6X
Mapcode Global: WH3P1.GW0J
Plus Code: 9C7QVM79+8P
Entry Name: Hall And Church Officer's House, Linthouse Church, 9 Skipness Drive, Glasgow
Listing Name: 9 Skipness Drive, Linthouse/St Kenneth's Church Including Original Church Hall and Church Officer's House
Listing Date: 12 October 1989
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 376928
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB33313
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: 9 Skipness Drive, Linthouse Church, Hall And Church Officer's House
ID on this website: 200376928
Location: Glasgow
County: Glasgow
Town: Glasgow
Electoral Ward: Govan
Traditional County: Lanarkshire
Tagged with: Building
James Miller, 1899-1900. Arts and Crafts church, with halls and church officer's house on E flank, altered 1933 by Keppie and Henderson to provide new organ chamber, hall to W added 1953 by John S Boyd, architect. Stugged red ashlar with polished dressings. Slate roofs.
Church: gabled main elevation to road flanked by battered square entrance towers fronting aisles, and each with off-centre doorway and topped by finialed and leaded ogee-domed open cupola; main (3-bay) gable with key-stoned main doorway central (2-leaf timber doors with iron hinges) set in columned and arched doorpiece, gallery windows set in giant scale Venetian window derived feature full width of gable and reaching into gable-head; skews; finialed decorative axial ventilator.
Original hall: has mullioned small-paned windows to E flank (Hutton Drive), gable to Skipness Drive with kneeler skewputts, finialed axial ventilator; linked to church by archway facing Skipness Drive.
Church officer's house: at S end of hall, fronting Hutton Drive; twin-gabled 2-storey elevation with door left, mullioned domestic-scale 1st floor windows, skews with kneeler skewputts, corniced square stack over front angle at right.
Set behind decorative wrought-iron railings.
Ecclesiastical building in use as such. Memorial stone
laid 24 June 1899; church opened 5 April 1900.
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