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Latitude: 54.8116 / 54°48'41"N
Longitude: -4.1666 / 4°9'59"W
OS Eastings: 260858
OS Northings: 548452
OS Grid: NX608484
Mapcode National: GBR JH2Z.XV2
Mapcode Global: WH4WG.ZB17
Plus Code: 9C6QRR6M+J8
Entry Name: Wash House, Ingleston Farm
Listing Name: Ingleston Farm, Wash House
Listing Date: 14 December 2011
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 400794
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB51852
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Ingleston Farm, Wash House
ID on this website: 200400794
Location: Borgue
County: Dumfries and Galloway
Electoral Ward: Dee and Glenkens
Parish: Borgue
Traditional County: Kirkcudbrightshire
Tagged with: Architectural structure
Possibly G H Higginbottom, early 20th century. Single storey, roughly 3-bay Arts and Crafts wash house with prominent steep piended swept roof and louvered and finialled ventilator. Coursed squared whinstone rubble with dressed long and short quoins. Overhanging timber boarded eaves. Regular fenestration to front (W) and rear (E) with central doorway to W with boarded timber door. Blind elevations to N and S, with adjoining flat roofed extension to S. Round-capped drying-post bases adjacent to N and S elevations.
Small pane glazing in timber windows. Clay tiles on steep swept and piended roof. Prominent hipped wallhead stacks with clay cans.
INTERIOR: plain interior with some later alteration. Some clay patterened tiles to floor and lath and plaster walls.
The Ingleston Farm wash house is a rare and well detailed example of a domestic scale wash house, built for the farm by the imaginative owner of the nearby Knockbrex Estate, James Brown. The building exhibits a number of good architectural features, including a prominent roof ventilator and tall wallhead stacks. The survival of a domestic scale wash house from this period, particularly with such fine architectural detailing in Arts and Crafts style, is relatively rare.
The use of relatively distinctive architectural detailing is characteristic of Brown's patronage, and can also be seen at the nearby model dairy at Corseyard and at Knockbrex itself (see separate listings). Both these buildings and the wash house illustrate a blend of decorative design and practical function. In the case of the wash house the elongated stacks and tall ridge ventilator serve to increase the draw of air through the building helping to remove steam whilst washing was underway and to dry any washing hung indoors.
The architect for Brown's work at Knockbrex may have been G H Higginbottom who was based in Manchester. Higginbottom worked in the Arts and Crafts style and was associated with the craftsmen, cabinet maker Frank Hallows and coppersmith James Smithies who Brown used in other commissions. It is likely that Brown utilised Higginbottom's designs for the wash house as he was also used elsewhere on the estate, for example in the design for Kirkandrew's Church (see separate listing).
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.
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