East Range, Temple Mains Farm, Innerwick is a Grade B listed building in the East Lothian local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 5 February 1971.
East Range, Temple Mains Farm, Innerwick
- WRENN ID
- solemn-casement-merlin
- Grade
- B
- Local Planning Authority
- East Lothian
- Country
- Scotland
- Date first listed
- 5 February 1971
- Source
- Historic Environment Scotland listing
Description
This is an early 19th-century farm steading, with later additions from the mid-19th century. It is constructed of random rubble with stugged ashlar dressings, and has pantile roofs with slate eaves courses, now punctuated by late 19th-century skylights. The layout is irregular.
The East Range steps downwards following the ground's fall to the south. The northern block is higher-walled, with a piended north end, and connects to a lower, longer section via a mutual gable. A blocked door is visible on the north side. An office is attached to the higher block, featuring a window flanked by two doorways on the west elevation. The lower range’s west elevation has irregular openings for stables, and two pyramidally capped, louvred ventilators. Cobbled floors have been retained within the range, along with brick setts on the west carriageway.
The cartshed and granary form a rectangular block containing cartsheds of two different dates. Its north elevation features two widely spaced segmental cart arches, with small-paned granary windows above. A later timber forestair and a recessed doorway break the eaves of the piend-roofed section, flanked to the right by a granary light on the east elevation. The original stone forestair to the granary door remains in the gable of the west elevation, flanked by windows, with a blocked triangular vent in the gable head. A slightly later stone lean-to cartshed with a cat-slide roof has been added to the south elevation, featuring a timber lintel and two wide cart openings divided by a single cast-iron column. The granary has a timber floor.
The threshing mill, engine house, and stalk are arranged in a rectangular plan. The mill has a granary above and a gabled north elevation that formerly adjoined a now-demolished west range, with a piend roof to the south. Two granary windows are present on the east side, and a gabled hayloft breaks the eaves above the doorway on the west side. The engine house, a tall, piend-roofed single-storey building, abuts the mill at the north end of the west side, with a doorway to the west and a taller doorway flanked by a window to the south.
The stalk is a tapering circular section of brick, with moulded neck courses and a tall, ashlar-coped pedestal set in the re-entrant angle to the north of the engine house.
The west range has been largely demolished, with a modern building inserted in its place. The north range is considered to be of no architectural merit. The remaining three groups, as described, each represent good examples of their type and retain noteworthy detailing. The farm was known as Westhall until around 1900.
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