History in Structure

4 Cluny Place, Edinburgh

A Category B Listed Building in Morningside, Edinburgh

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Coordinates

Latitude: 55.9265 / 55°55'35"N

Longitude: -3.2014 / 3°12'5"W

OS Eastings: 325027

OS Northings: 671036

OS Grid: NT250710

Mapcode National: GBR 8MQ.0Z

Mapcode Global: WH6SS.S9QH

Plus Code: 9C7RWQGX+JC

Entry Name: 4 Cluny Place, Edinburgh

Listing Name: 2-16 (Even Nos) Cluny Place

Listing Date: 30 March 1993

Category: B

Source: Historic Scotland

Source ID: 393533

Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB46294

Building Class: Cultural

Also known as: Edinburgh, 4 Cluny Place

ID on this website: 200393533

Location: Edinburgh

County: Edinburgh

Town: Edinburgh

Electoral Ward: Morningside

Traditional County: Midlothian

Tagged with: Architectural structure

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Description

R Rowand Anderson, 1895. Terrace of 8, 2-storey 2-bay houses with half-timbered end gables, 1st floor deep as attic. Cream squared and snecked rubble with red ashlar dressings. Chamfered reveals; architraved timber dormers and oriels; exposed rafters to gables; base course to canted windows; panelled doors with dentilled cornice and 6-pane rectangular fanlights.

E (front) elevation: single bay end houses with canted ashlar window at ground floor; rendered half-timbered gable jettied on timber brackets rising from stone corbels, tripartite oriel in gablehead. Centre houses in 3 pairs with elevations mirrored about centre; centre bays with doorways and single dormers to mansard roof, outer bays with canted ashlar window at ground floor breaking eaves in canted dormer with segmental-arched pediment to centre light.

S elevation: 3-bay; entrance doorway to centre with bipartite window at 1st floor breaking eaves with catslide roof. Canted timber window on ashlar base with half- piend roof to left bay, single window at 1st floor breaking eaves with catslide roof; single window at 1st floor to right breaking eaves with catslide roof.

N elevation: as S elevation, mirrored.

W (rear) elevation: tall mansard roof with single windows; single storey service projections with half-piend roofs; end houses gabled with apex stacks.

Timber sash and case windows, mostly 4- or 6-pane upper sashes with plate glass or 2-pane lower sashes, multi- pane casements to oriels and single dormers. Green slate mansard roof with red ridge tiles; 2 apex stacks (see above), mutual rendered stacks with ashlar cornices. Ashlar skews with coped skewputts.

Interior: plain tiled vestibules, inner doors with dentilled cornice and leaded panes to upper panel.

Tall rubble wall to rear and sides with semi-circular coping, low rubble wall to front with ashlar coping.

Statement of Interest

Group with 16, 17 Cluny, 18 Cluny Place and 18 Cluny Avenue and 1-15 Cluny Place. Cluny Place formed part of the later phase of the development of the Braid estate (see notes 16, 17 Cluny Avenue). The terrace also apparently influenced James Hutton of Dundee in his design of 1-5 Station Terrace, Invergowrie, circa 1900.

External Links

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