Boundary Bank, Oxnam Road, Jedburgh is a Grade C listed building in the Scottish Borders local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 23 March 1993. Villa. 5 related planning applications.
Boundary Bank, Oxnam Road, Jedburgh
- WRENN ID
- muffled-lancet-sunrise
- Grade
- C
- Local Planning Authority
- Scottish Borders
- Country
- Scotland
- Date first listed
- 23 March 1993
- Type
- Villa
- Source
- Historic Environment Scotland listing
Description
Boundary Bank is an earlier 19th-century symmetrical two-storey, three-bay villa located on Oxnam Road in Jedburgh. The building features a raised basement at the rear and an attic. It is constructed from squared and snecked cream sandstone rubble, accented with ashlar dressings and quoin strips.
The east elevation presents a two-storey, three-bay facade with a flat-roofed porch at the center. The ground floor has stugged ashlar, with bank courses above both levels. A flat-panelled door is flanked by narrow windows with six vertical panes. Above the door, there is a single window, and the ground floor has returns with blind windows. A timber flag pole is attached to the left of the first-floor window. The flanking bays contain windows on both floors, with a later narrow closet window to the right of the porch. To the far right, there is a low flat-roofed porch with a secondary door.
The south elevation features two bays over two storeys and a raised basement, with windows present on all floors. There is a single flat-roofed box dormer with side lights.
On the west elevation, there are three bays over two storeys and a raised basement. The central bay has single windows on both the ground and first floors, while the outer bays feature projecting canted piend-roofed timber windows supported on iron stilts, with bipartite windows in the basement below. A low flat-roofed store is located to the outer left.
The north elevation has two bays over two storeys, with a window to the right at ground level and blind windows on the first floor. A low flat-roofed porch is situated to the outer left, featuring a small window, while a similar store is found to the outer right. A scar from a former addition remains at ground level, and there is a box dormer similar to the one on the south elevation.
The villa has 12-pane timber sash and case windows, with 4-pane windows on the canted windows and 6-pane windows in the basement. The roof is piend and platform style, covered with grey slates, and features coped harled stacks. The interior, which was not seen in 1992, is said to contain some original fireplaces, panelling, and dados.
A coach house is located to the northeast, built from squared and snecked rubble. It originally had double coach doors to the left, which have since been replaced with lower boarded garage doors and timber infill above. There is a scar from a former hay loft door at the center and a window to the right of center, with later broad boarded doors inserted to the far right. The coach house has a piend roof.
The entrance gate and wall to the boundaries feature a droved ashlar doorway with plain coping and a parapet, along with a rubble wall.
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 — 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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