Ingothill House, Langside Drive, Kennoway is a Grade B listed building in the Fife local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 27 June 1973. 1 related planning application.
Ingothill House, Langside Drive, Kennoway
- WRENN ID
- inner-keep-dawn
- Grade
- B
- Local Planning Authority
- Fife
- Country
- Scotland
- Date first listed
- 27 June 1973
- Source
- Historic Environment Scotland listing
Description
Ingothill House is a large, two-storey house built in 1833 for Robert Hutchison. The builder was James Dowie. It has an L-shaped plan with a single-storey projection at the rear and a piend-roofed design. The exterior is constructed from snecked red whinstone rubble with contrasting, roughly dressed ashlar quoins. A base course and eaves cornice are also present.
The south elevation is symmetrical, featuring a plain corniced doorpiece with a deep-set panelled timber door and a fanlight above, set centrally. Windows are in the flanking bays, and there is regular fenestration close to the eaves on the first floor. The west elevation has four windows grouped to the centre and left bays at ground level, with three windows similarly grouped at the first floor. A prominent, shouldered wallhead stack is positioned off-centre to the right. The east elevation has windows to the right and left of the centre at ground level, and a blocked window centrally on the first floor, below another shouldered wallhead stack. The north elevation has a stair window to the centre bay, with windows to each floor at the outer left. A projecting wing is on the right, leading to a further projecting single-storey bay with windows facing north, east, and west.
Most windows are timber sash and case with a 12-pane glazing pattern; however, the east elevation has plate glass glazing. The roof is slate-covered, and the chimneys are coped ashlar and harl with shouldered details and some cans.
Originally listed as Kennoway Old Parish Manse, contemporary records describe the house as "excellent and commodious" with offices and a garden wall, built on a convenient site near the church. Robert Hutchison, who also worked on the session room and watch house at Old Kennoway Churchyard, was employed as Clerk of Works, producing working drawings based on a plan altered by the late Captain Lundin, and drawn by James Fisher under his directions.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
- Related listed building consents — 1 application
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
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