We don't have any photos of this building yet. Why don't you be the first to send us one?
Latitude: 56.3953 / 56°23'43"N
Longitude: -3.4511 / 3°27'4"W
OS Eastings: 310522
OS Northings: 723505
OS Grid: NO105235
Mapcode National: GBR 1Y.14MX
Mapcode Global: WH5P6.YJS4
Plus Code: 9C8R9GWX+4H
Entry Name: Nurses Home With Recreation Room
Listing Name: Perth Royal Infirmary, Nurses Home with Recreation Room and Including Boundary Walls, Gatepiers and Gates
Listing Date: 29 August 2006
Category: C
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 398867
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB50580
Building Class: Cultural
ID on this website: 200398867
Location: Perth
County: Perth and Kinross
Town: Perth
Electoral Ward: Perth City South
Traditional County: Perthshire
Tagged with: Architectural structure
James Miller, 1929-1931. Imposing 2-storey and attic, 15-bay, T-plan, piend- and platform-roofed neo-Georgian nurses home with pavilion-type single storey and attic recreation room with transomed windows linked at rear. Sited to SE of hospital in small tree-lined garden on raised ground overlooking City of Perth. Principal entrance bays comprising blind portico with Ionic pilasters, consoled canopy and dentilled cornice over 2-leaf panelled door with multi-pane fanlight and flanking corniced windows; regular fenestration in vertical brick bands divided by broad pilasters; small wallhead dormers. Painted harl with contrasting red brick detail. Deep brick base course and eaves cornice. Architraved windows and brick voussoirs.
Principal elevation to NE with 3 slightly advanced centre bays forming entrance with moulded dies projecting above cornice, regular fenestration to flanking bays and to small wallhead dormers.
12-pane glazing pattern in timber sash and case windows and top-hopper windows, and multi-pane glazing to transomed windows. Grey slates. Coped harled stacks with some cans.
INTERIOR: little altered with plain cornicing, panelled doors, multi-pane screen doors and timber fire surrounds. Vestibules and washrooms with tiled floors. Recreation room retains plain cornicing, panelled timber dado, boarded floor, and timber fire surround with marble inset and cast iron grate.
BOUNDARY WALLS AND GATEPIERS: semicircular-coped brick boundary walls with square-section brick gatepiers and ironwork gates.
The nurses home at Perth Royal Infirmary is a distinguished, little altered example of James Miller's later work. Externally it is a replica of the main pavilion at Stirling Royal Infirmary (opened 1928), the central pavilion of which Sloan and Murray describe as 'vaguely Lutyens: hipped swept roof, white pilasters punctuating the two-storey brick elevation, white window frames and tall chimneys' (p46). The design is again presented in the stripped neo-classical elegance of the 1939 Nairn Head Offices at Kirkcaldy 'the most distinguished of Miller's neo-classical '30s administration buildings' (p54). Although designed to provide accommodation for 64 nurses, the nurses home is no longer used to anything like full capacity, but retains a quiet dignity, fulfilling its design function. The brick and harl detailing is a reflection of the construction materials used in the nearby Infirmary, also a James Miller design, begun in 1910. The original spacious plan of the Infirmary, incorporating piend roofed pavilions with square towers bearing signature cupolas, has gradually been eroded with the addition of infill pavilions and ancillaries.
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
Other nearby listed buildings