Heathery Park, 47 Clelland Road, Wishaw is a Grade B listed building in the North Lanarkshire local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 30 March 2001. Villa. 5 related planning applications.
Heathery Park, 47 Clelland Road, Wishaw
- WRENN ID
- errant-lancet-bramble
- Grade
- B
- Local Planning Authority
- North Lanarkshire
- Country
- Scotland
- Date first listed
- 30 March 2001
- Type
- Villa
- Source
- Historic Environment Scotland listing
Description
Heathery Park, located at 47 Clelland Road in Wishaw, is a 2-storey, 4-bay asymmetrical Scottish villa built in 1907 by Alexander Cullen. This rectangular-plan building is constructed from white ashlar sandstone and features stone mullioned windows with overhanging eaves and plain windows.
The principal elevation faces east and has a central entrance with a panelled timber door, topped by a consoled cornice and a steep pediment that includes carved fleurs-de-lys in the tympanum and finiato shoulders. To the right, there is a bipartite window with moulded panels above, and a small bipartite window above that. The right side features a 2-storey canted window on a taller crowstepped gable, with a cornice and an ogee lead roof above. On the outer left at the first floor, there is another bipartite window with a tall shaped gable head that breaks the eaves, and a carved panel dated 1907.
The rear elevation, facing south, is irregular with three bays. It has a window with a plain dressed sill and lintel to the left, and two bipartite plain dressed windows to the right of the central bay. Above, there is a wallhead dormer with a raking scalloped parapet, and an advanced single-storey bay that includes a single light and a plain door. The roof is a swept piended gable, with a single light wallhead dormer above and a front-facing crowstepped gable in the left bay, topped by a triangular oriel window with a swept lead roof.
The side elevation to the south features an irregularly fenestrated M-gabled wall, with a large 6-light rectangular mullioned and transomed window at the centre and a gable head stack to the right gable. The north side also has an irregular fenestrated M-gabled wall, with an advanced canted single-storey bay to the right, which has a cornice and a stone renaissance balustrade above.
Throughout the building, there are small pane timber sash and case windows, a grey slate roof, and an M-gabled roof with projecting eaves. The ashlar coped skews have distinctive scrolled skew putts, and the stacks feature simple caps over sailing courses.
Inside, the villa boasts dark stained and waxed woodwork, plaster moulded "Posies" in low relief on the drawing room ceiling, and leaded glass in the hall and staircase window.
The boundary wall surrounding the property is low, made of squared sandstone coursers with saddleback coping, and features modern wrought-iron gates.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
- Related listed building consents — 5 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.
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