Grange Cemetery Extension, Edinburgh is a Grade B listed building in the City of Edinburgh local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 14 December 1970.

Grange Cemetery Extension, Edinburgh

WRENN ID
silver-bracket-grain
Grade
B
Local Planning Authority
City of Edinburgh
Country
Scotland
Date first listed
14 December 1970
Source
Historic Environment Scotland listing

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Description

The Grange Cemetery, established in 1847 as a necropolis for the Edinburgh Southern Cemetery Company, was originally designed by David Bryce and extended in 1924 by T Aikman Swan. The site covers 12 acres and is laid out in regular blocks divided by gravel paths, arranged symmetrically along a north-south axis.

The cemetery’s boundary is defined by various elements, including high coped rubble walls along the north, south, and west boundaries. The north boundary, along Grange Road and Beaufort Road, features decorative cast-iron carriage gates with anthemion motifs and barleysugar spearhead finials, set within large polished ashlar gatepiers with pedestals, cornices, and pyramidal coping. A lower boundary wall with railings links to a pedestrian gateway in a matching style. Further east, along Lovers’ Loan, a lower rubble wall with ashlar coping is topped with a series of decorative cast-iron panels and piers.

A symmetrical, single-storey range of vaults runs along the north elevation, constructed of polished ashlar with a base course, wallhead cornice, corniced parapet, and buttresses. A central barrel-vaulted pend provides access to gated chambers, with a nook-shafted entrance featuring a roll-moulded arch, carved masque label stops, and a blank rectangular tablet above. Dog-leg staircases are situated on either side of the entrance. Smaller, round-arched doorways in a similar style are found in the pavilions and central ranges, protected by decorative cast-iron grilles matching the main gates, with trefoil oculi in the remaining bays.

The cemetery contains a large number of wall and free-standing monuments, predominantly in Gothic and Classical styles. Notable examples include the Thomas Chalmers monument, a coped ashlar wall with commemorative slabs; the Dick Lauder monument, a gabled ashlar structure with pointed arches, chevron mouldings, and polished granite columns; the William Stuart monument, featuring broken obelisks and a carved palm tree; the Ann Drysdale monument, depicting a full-size female figure; and the McCallum monument, featuring a full-size female figure holding a wreath.

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