History in Structure

No 1, Red Row

A Category C Listed Building in Midlothian East, Midlothian

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Coordinates

Latitude: 55.8821 / 55°52'55"N

Longitude: -2.9586 / 2°57'30"W

OS Eastings: 340129

OS Northings: 665858

OS Grid: NT401658

Mapcode National: GBR 70SF.88

Mapcode Global: WH7V7.JFC1

Plus Code: 9C7VV2JR+VH

Entry Name: No 1, Red Row

Listing Name: Redrow Cottages

Listing Date: 26 February 2003

Category: C

Source: Historic Scotland

Source ID: 396663

Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB49109

Building Class: Cultural

ID on this website: 200396663

Location: Cranston

County: Midlothian

Electoral Ward: Midlothian East

Parish: Cranston

Traditional County: Midlothian

Tagged with: Architectural structure

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Description

1892. Six 3-bay, single storey rectangular-plan farm cottages divided into 2 terraces. Tooled coursed pink sandstone with dressed red sandstone ashlar long and short quoins, pink sandstone sills.

S (PRINCIPAL) ELEVATION: six cottages each comprising: central doorway with red ashlar margins, timber panelled door with small glazed fanlight above, window with chamfered red sandstone margins and projecting sill flanking.

W & E ELEVATIONS: blind wall with small rectangular window to rear of property (rectangular red post-box inset to right on W gable of W terrace), overhanging eaves with projecting ornamental bargeboards to apex of gable; gablehead stack.

N (REAR) ELEVATION: similar plan to front, although some cottages with single storey late 20th century extensions.

12-pane glazing in timber sash and case windows to front, 8-pane sash and case to sides. Gabled/pitched grey slate roof with stone ridging tiles, exposed rafters and purlins supporting large triangular timber barge board with curved bracket in-fill and lower finial. Green painted guttering with replacement plastic down-pipes. Square sandstone stacks to gables of W range with projecting moulded neck copes and single octagonal can, triple cans to 2 central rectangular stacks; matching rectangular stacks with paired octagonal cans to gables of E range, triple canned to 2 central stacks (middle can missing on centre right stack), zinc flashing to bases of all stacks.

INTERIOR: not seen, 2000.

Statement of Interest

Rebuilt on the site of former cottages in 1892 at Rosemains in the Preston Hall Estate, these little-altered cottages represent one of the few "new build" projects to take place in the parish at the end of the 19th century. The six cottages are split into 2 terraces of three cottages. Each cottage has its own strip of flowerbed to the front of the property and a contained garden to the rear. The neighbouring parish Crichton saw planned farm worker's housing built around this time on a farm also owned by the Preston Hall Estate. Red Row is built using design principles of much older, traditional farm cottages. The steep pitch of the roof and relatively low height of the walls resemble the earlier cottages in nearby Pathhead, which are believed to have been thatched.

External Links

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