Latitude: 58.9804 / 58°58'49"N
Longitude: -2.9586 / 2°57'31"W
OS Eastings: 344992
OS Northings: 1010756
OS Grid: HY449107
Mapcode National: GBR M41Z.ZB1
Mapcode Global: WH7C4.JJCX
Plus Code: 9CCVX2JR+5H
Entry Name: Bowling Pavilion, Brandquoy Park, Kirkwall
Listing Name: Kirkwall, Watergate, Old Brandyquoy Bowling Clubhouse
Listing Date: 15 March 1999
Category: C
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 393084
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB45977
Building Class: Cultural
ID on this website: 200393084
Location: Kirkwall
County: Orkney Islands
Town: Kirkwall
Electoral Ward: Kirkwall East
Traditional County: Orkney
Tagged with: Pavilion
1906. Single storey, 5-bay rectangular-plan, timber boarded bowling pavilion with chamfered square-plan supports and timber railings to veranda along principal elevation. Plain bargeboards.
S (PRINCIPAL) ELEVATION: Boarded door in bays 2, 4 and 5 (from left). Chamfered corner to right. Windows to centre and outer left bays. N (REAR) ELEVATION: window in slightly advanced bay to outer left. W (SIDE) ELEVATION: window set to right.
Timber-framed windows with top-hung upper lights. Corrugated-iron cat-slide roof; cast-iron rainwater goods.
INTERIOR: largely intact. Locker room: timber boarded with full height fitted, numbered equipment lockers to each side; individual jack corner display shelving to SE angle. E Room with display cabinets, shelves and timber benches and metal hooks.
A largely intact early 20th century timber bowling clubhouse situated beside the Earl's Palace in Kirkwall. Mackay describes the clubhouse as 'well appointed'. The interior is lined with rows of numbered and labelled square timber lockers. Fitted display cabinets, shelves and timber benches remain in place. The reverse of the second entrance door retains its original enamelled lane markers and holders.
Lawn bowls has a long and distinguished history and remains a hugely popular sport. The earliest reference to the game in Scotland appeared in 1469, when James IV played a variation of the game referred to as 'lang bowlis' at St Andrews in Fife. The first public bowling green in Scotland was laid out in 1669 at Haddington, near Edinburgh, however it was not until 1864 that the rules of the modern game were committed to writing by William Mitchell of Glasgow in his Manual of Bowl-Playing. Machine manufactured standard bowls were invented by Thomas Taylor Ltd, also of Glasgow, in 1871 and the Scottish Bowling Association was formed in 1892. The advent of indoor bowling also began in Scotland around 1879. Today there are around 900 clubs in Scotland with an estimated 90,000 active lawn bowls players.
Change of statutory address and list description updated as part of the sporting buildings thematic study (2012-13). Previously listed as 'Kirkwall, Bowling Green, Bowling Pavilion'.
The clubhouse sits within the scheduled area boundary of the Earl's Palace (see Scheduled Ancient Monument Number 90194) but the above-ground clubhouse structure is excluded from the scheduling.
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