106 High Street, Dalkeith is a Grade B listed building in the Midlothian local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 30 June 1983. 4 related planning applications.
106 High Street, Dalkeith
- WRENN ID
- vast-clay-foxglove
- Grade
- B
- Local Planning Authority
- Midlothian
- Country
- Scotland
- Date first listed
- 30 June 1983
- Source
- Historic Environment Scotland listing
Description
104 High Street in Dalkeith is a later 19th-century, three-storey and attic, two-bay tenement featuring a narrow tympany gable. The ground floor houses a shop (No 106) facing High Street, while the tenement (No 104) is accessed from White's Close through a passageway in Nos 100 and 102 High Street. The building is constructed of ashlar with a base course and a band course between the first and second floors. The rear tenement is made of brick, with ashlar lintels, cills, and quoins, and includes contrasting brick relieving arches.
On the west elevation facing High Street, there is a replacement shop front with a recessed door and flanking plate glass windows, featuring a droved surround, a cornice with foliated moulding, and carved stops. The first and second floors have regularly spaced fenestration, with taller windows on the first floor. A round-arched window is located in the gablehead, which has a broad bracketed cill. The gablet-crowstepped gablehead is topped with a deeply corniced stack at the apex.
The north elevation is adjoined to Nos 108 and 110 High Street, while the south elevation is adjoined to Nos 100 and 102 High Street.
The rear tenement's south elevation features two doors and irregularly spaced fenestration, including stair windows, with barred ground floor windows. It has a steeply pitched roof, a broad harled gablehead stack to the east, a harled ridge stack, and a shouldered brick center stack to the north. A two-storey rubble tenement is attached to the harled east gable, with a date stone inscribed "CAC 1881" above the door and regular fenestration, while the east gable is blank.
The windows are primarily sash and case, with a four-pane glazing pattern on the west side, and a mix of plate glass, 12-pane, and uPVC glazing patterns in the tenement. The building has a common ridge line for the transverse west and gabled roofs, covered with grey slates. A cast-iron butter-pipe with fleur-de-lis fixtures is located on the left side of the west elevation.
More on this building
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- Full EPC report — heating system, energy costs, size, glazing, construction etc.
- No sale records on file
- Related listed building consents — 4 applications
- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
- Radon risk assessment
Matched applications, energy data and sale records are assembled automatically and may contain errors. Flag incorrect data.