30 High Street, Hawick is a Grade C listed building in the Scottish Borders local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 19 August 1977. 4 related planning applications.
30 High Street, Hawick
- WRENN ID
- sunken-cornice-heath
- Grade
- C
- Local Planning Authority
- Scottish Borders
- Country
- Scotland
- Date first listed
- 19 August 1977
- Source
- Historic Environment Scotland listing
Description
The Queens Head Public House, located at 32 High Street in Hawick, is a three-storey and attic, four-bay tenement building dating from the later 19th century, with a later 20th-century bank front. It forms part of a terrace and features cladding, likely concrete, at the ground floor, while the upper levels are constructed from tooled, squared, coursed yellow sandstone with polished ashlar dressings. The building has a base course, first-floor cill and lintel courses with a continuous hoodmould, a second-floor continuous hoodmould, and a modillioned cornice at the eaves. Quoin strips are also present, along with stop-chamfered, roll-moulded, raised margins.
The ground floor is characterized by channelled pilasters and cladding, with a timber-panelled tenement door featuring a fanlight positioned to the right of centre, flanked by two bank entrances. To the outer right, there is a half-glazed bank front section, while the outer left has six full-height slit windows with recessed transoms. The first-floor windows are segmental-arched, and the upper storeys feature Tudor-arched windows with bracketed cills and ornamental keystones at the second floor, along with pedimented dormers that break the eaves. At the rear, there are yellow brick lean-to sheds with timber-boarded doors against an ashlar-coped rubble wall.
The bank front has fixed plate glass, while the upper floors and rear feature some four-pane glazing in timber sash and case windows, and twelve-pane glazing in timber sash and case windows to the stair at the rear. The roof is covered with grey slate and has a metal ridge, with ashlar-coped, kneelered skews and an ashlar-coped, rendered end stack with circular buff clay cans.
Inside, there is a stone tenement stair with spiral cast-iron balusters and a polished timber handrail. The flats feature cast metal letterboxes with a bat motif on the four-panel timber doors.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- 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.