111 Great Southern Road, Aberdeen is a Grade C listed building in the Aberdeen City local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 29 February 2000.

111 Great Southern Road, Aberdeen

WRENN ID
old-railing-linden
Grade
C
Local Planning Authority
Aberdeen City
Country
Scotland
Date first listed
29 February 2000
Source
Historic Environment Scotland listing

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Description

113 and 115 Great Southern Road in Aberdeen is a two-storey and attic, 11-bay terrace built in 1904 by George Sutherland, consisting of five houses. The exterior is made of tooled grey granite, finely finished at the margins, with a rough-faced base course. It features segmental-arched doorways with keystone details, a dividing band course, a cill course on the first floor, overhanging eaves, and rectangular dormers in the attic.

The west elevation facing Great Southern Road is asymmetrical, with five irregularly spaced doorways on the ground floor. To the left, there is a panelled Ionic pilastered timber door flanked by stained glass panels, with half Ionic pilasters on either side and decorative stained glass fanlights that include the house number. There are three canted three-light windows on the ground and first floors, with coped parapets forming a balcony accessed from decorative tripartite rectangular dormers. The remainder of the ground and first floors has irregularly placed bipartite and single windows, along with dormers and skylights in the attic. The outer left and right corners feature octagonal terminating towers with quadripartite windows on the ground and first floors, corniced eaves, and octagonal spires.

The south elevation is symmetrical and gabled, constructed from granite rubble, with single windows at the center of the ground and first floors. The east elevation was not seen in 1999. The north elevation, facing Murray Terrace, is asymmetrical and gabled, with an off-center entrance porch to No. 89 Murray Terrace on the left side at ground level. This porch has decorative timber astragals and a dentil-moulded cornice, with irregularly arranged windows in the left bays.

Originally, the houses had timber sash and case windows with plate glass in the lower sash and small-pane upper sash, but Nos. 113, 115, and 119 have replacement windows. The roof is covered in grey slate with terracotta ridges, and there are coped granite gableheads and ridge stacks with circular cans, along with cast-iron rainwater goods. The boundary walls are made of coped rough-faced rubble, located to the west and north of the property.

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