108 Queen's Road, Aberdeen is a Grade C listed building in the Aberdeen City local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 17 June 1992. Villa.

108 Queen's Road, Aberdeen

WRENN ID
salt-footing-thyme
Grade
C
Local Planning Authority
Aberdeen City
Country
Scotland
Date first listed
17 June 1992
Type
Villa
Source
Historic Environment Scotland listing

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Description

108 Queen's Road in Aberdeen is a two-storey and attic detached villa designed by architect Charles Steven for himself. It is situated on a corner site and features rock-faced rubble with ashlar dressings, including a cill course at the first floor. There is a single-storey and attic rear wing to the north, constructed in Aberdeen bond. The villa has a low slated piend roof with paired timber brackets supporting the overhanging eaves and tall, raked end stacks. The windows are sash and case, mostly with plate glass in the lower sashes and four-paned upper sashes.

The entrance elevation is three bays wide, with the entrance located in a wide ashlar corniced and architraved doorcase at the center, above which is a bipartite window at the first floor. To the left, there are bipartite windows at both the ground and first floors, with the eaves line broken by an open pediment and a raked stack rising behind. To the right, there is a projecting six-light canted bay window with a rock-faced plinth, ashlar mullions, and a parapet. Above this bay, there is a long horizontal window at the first floor, featuring a single stone mullion at the center and two timber mullions dividing the window into four sections on either side. An off-centre tripartite dormer window is located in the slope of the roof, topped with a small timber open pediment.

At the southeast angle, there is an attached circular tower that rises above the wallhead of the main elevations. This tower has a band course at the eaves, a fish-scale slated swept conical roof with bracketed overhanging eaves, scalloped flashing, and a decorative finial at the apex. The southeast elevation is two bays wide, with a canted six-light projecting window bay to the left that has a parapet, and a four-light window above at the first floor, featuring a single masonry mullion flanked by two timber mullions. To the right, there is a blind bay with a blind recessed ashlar panel close to the ground, and a bipartite window with a timber mullion at the first floor. A central timber dormer with an open pediment mirrors the design seen on the east elevation. The interior has not been seen since 1991.

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