22-24 Queen Street is a Grade C listed building in the South Lanarkshire local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 6 July 2005.
22-24 Queen Street
- WRENN ID
- tattered-hearth-violet
- Grade
- C
- Local Planning Authority
- South Lanarkshire
- Country
- Scotland
- Date first listed
- 6 July 2005
- Source
- Historic Environment Scotland listing
Description
20 Queen Street and 115 King Street is a two-storey, gabled Masonic Hall, built in 1897 by Robert Dalglish. Originally featuring shops and a public house on the ground floor, the building has a crowstepped gable, a canted oriel window, and a decorative doorpiece on the west side, along with two gabled dormer windows on the south side. It is constructed from polished red sandstone ashlar and includes a base course, string course, and eaves course. The main entrance is located on the south elevation facing Queen Street.
The south elevation features a two-leaf timber panelled door on the left, set within a pilastered, pointed-arch architrave. Above this door is a circular window with a Star of David glazing pattern, all recessed under a hoodmoulded round arch. In the centre of the first floor, there is a small aediculed window with a round pediment. To the right, the crowstepped gable includes a timber-panelled door and former shop windows on the ground floor, which are partially walled up. Above, there is a large mullioned oriel window that is corbelled out, featuring quatrefoil carving at its base, and a datestone at the gable apex. The ground floor also has partially walled-up former shop windows and a door. The upper floor has two large mullioned dormer windows that break the eaves, with roll-moulded pointed-arch margins and shouldered gableheads.
The upper floor windows are timber sash and case with plate glass, while the ground floor features predominantly non-traditional glazing. The building has ashlar-coped skews, corniced gablehead stacks, and iron ridge vents. The roof is covered with non-traditional late 20th-century tiles, and the cast-iron rainwater goods have plain hoppers.
Inside, the building has been predominantly remodelled and modernised in the late 20th century. The Masonic Lodge features a trussed ceiling, which is covered by a false ceiling.
More on this building
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- No EPC on record for this property
- No sale records on file
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- Detailed attributes — period, style, materials, features
- Flood risk assessment
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