Including Courtyard Outbuildings At Rear, The Grapes, 4 Bridge Street is a Grade C listed building in the Dumfries and Galloway local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 26 June 2008. Public house.

Including Courtyard Outbuildings At Rear, The Grapes, 4 Bridge Street

WRENN ID
grey-pilaster-thyme
Grade
C
Local Planning Authority
Dumfries and Galloway
Country
Scotland
Date first listed
26 June 2008
Type
Public house
Source
Historic Environment Scotland listing

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Description

The Grapes, located at 4 Bridge Street, is a public house that likely dates from the early 19th century, with No 6 being rebuilt in 1862 and alterations made by R & S Sproule & Son in 1922. The building consists of two gabled structures that are now joined internally, featuring a unifying pilastrade and fascia from 1922 at the ground floor. The exterior is finished in white-painted rendered masonry with painted ashlar dressings, and it has a variety of mid to late 20th century glazing patterns in timber frames, topped with Welsh slate roofs.

No 4 is a single-storey and attic building with roughly three bays. It has an off-centre two-leaf timber panelled door, windows in the outer bays, and two gabled dormers that break the eaves. There is a coped stack to the right.

No 6 is two-storey and also has roughly three bays. It features a two-leaf timber panelled door to the right, a wide pend entrance to the left, and corniced window margins on the first floor. The gablehead stack to the right has assorted clay cans, and the skews are ashlar-coped. The rear of the building has extensions and irregular fenestration.

Inside, the pub retains a good traditional interior with a decorative scheme from the 1930s and 40s, along with several public sitting rooms on both floors. The inner entrance door is half-glazed with frosted glass inscribed 'The Grapes'. The principal bar room has full-height timber boarded panelling, a plain bar counter, a gantry, and a bell indicator box. There are two back rooms with dado-height timber boarding and bell pushes. An Art Deco cocktail bar upstairs features a fine mirrored gantry and a curve-ended banded timber bar counter. Throughout the building, there are predominantly timber-panelled interior doors and some 19th century plaster cornicing.

At the rear, there are mid-19th century outbuildings, consisting of single and two-storey gabled brick structures that once served as stabling, enclosing a small courtyard. These outbuildings have timber-boarded doors and grey slate roofs.

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Nearby listed buildings

  1. Including Courtyard Outbuildings At Rear, The Grapes, 6 Bridge Street Grade C 8 m
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  4. Stranraer Castle Grade A 54 m
  5. 77 Hanover Street, Stranraer Grade C 73 m
  6. Parish Church Hall And Burial-Ground, Bridge Street, Stranraer Grade C 76 m
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