History in Structure

8 Broomlands Street, Paisley

A Category B Listed Building in Paisley, Renfrewshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 55.844 / 55°50'38"N

Longitude: -4.4381 / 4°26'17"W

OS Eastings: 247439

OS Northings: 663892

OS Grid: NS474638

Mapcode National: GBR 3K.4S6S

Mapcode Global: WH3P5.SCTQ

Plus Code: 9C7QRHV6+JQ

Entry Name: 8 Broomlands Street, Paisley

Listing Name: 8-10 Broomlands Street

Listing Date: 8 January 1991

Category: B

Source: Historic Scotland

Source ID: 384417

Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB38930

Building Class: Cultural

Also known as: Paisley, 8 Broomlands Street

ID on this website: 200384417

Location: Paisley

County: Renfrewshire

Town: Paisley

Electoral Ward: Paisley Northwest

Traditional County: Renfrewshire

Tagged with: Architectural structure

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Description

Pair near contemporary tenement blocks, dating to late 1870's linked by cast-iron columned shopfronts at full width of both buildings; stugged, squared, and snecked rubble with polished ashlar dressings; distinctive cast-iron free-standing mullions, with glazing threaded behind, reminiscent of the work of Alexander Thomson (see note).

No 8 (right): 3-storey and attic; 4-bay. Original shopfront survives at ground, obscured at right by modern sign, with cast-iron corinthianesque columns raised on high narrow circular plinths; bracketed corniced entablature above (presumably also beneath modern shop sign), with cusped detailing between brackets. Shallow segmental-headed windows at 1st and 2nd floors, single lights paired at centre with flanking tripartites at outer bays, all with Thomsonesque slender free-standing cast-iron mullions (decorative), standing in front of stone mullions behind. Windows have stop-chamfered margins, round-moulded with pellet detail at lintel. 1st floor enhanced by continous stepped hood-moulds. Cill-course at 2nd floor; dentilled and bracketed eaves course. Elaborate centre wallhead stack, polygonal at centre, with pair flanking gabletted dies; datestone roundel in centre polygonal panel; quatrefoil roundels at dies, each with cast-iron finials. Thomsonesque chimney cans. Pair original canted dormer windows at outer bays; end stack to right.

No 10:original casat-iron columned shopfront at ground survives intact (detailing as No 8); openings at 1st and 2nd floors arranged as No 8, with identical low segmental-headed windows and slender free-standing cast-iron mullions; at 1st floor decorative consoles support corniced brackets to each bay instead of hood-mould at No 8. Cill-course at 2nd floor. Plain tall narrow centre wallhead stack with plainer polygonal chimney cans; pair flanking dormers.

Statement of Interest

Nos 8 and 10 were formerly Nos 78 and 79 prior to 1927 renumbering of Broomlands Street. Tenement style probably influenced by Alexander Thomson's Buck's Head Building, 63 Argyle Street, Glasgow (1863).

External Links

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