22 Bourtree Place, Hawick Conservative Club Hawick, Scotland

Listed Building Data

22 Bourtree Place, Hawick Conservative Club has been designated a scheduled monument in Scotland with the following information. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

Historic Scotland ID
400050 (entity ID)
Building ID
51191
Category
B
Name
22 Bourtree Place, Hawick Conservative Club
Parish
Hawick
County
Scottish Borders
Easting
350505
Northing
614873
Date Listed
18 November 2008

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

James Pearson Alison, dated 1897, with 20th-century additions to rear. 2-storey, Classical clubhouse with Doric porch and balustraded 1st-floor balcony on consoles to recessed 3-bay central section, projecting outer pedimented bays, and gabled hall to rear. Tooled yellow sandstone ashlar with polished ashlar dressings. Base course; blank first-floor frieze; eaves course; moulded cornice with antifixae. Rusticated quoins. Segmental-arched windows in lugged architraves at ground floor, rectangular architraved windows elsewhere. NW (PRINCIPAL) ELEVATION: 6 stone steps to central, multi-pane-glazed, timber front door with rectangular fanlight set within Roman Doric twin-columned porch with frieze bearing the inscription: 'MEMORIAL STONE LAID BY MARGARET COUNTESS OF DALKEITH 16TH OCTOBER 1897'. Balustraded balcony above, supported on console brackets to flanking bays. Projecting outer bays each with two windows at ground floor; single canted window at 1st floor crowned by balustrade; oculus in pediment. Additional 2-bay section to outer right with secondary door. NE (SIDE) ELEVATION: 3-bay, Classical section to right with segmental-pedimented dormers. Broad gabled hall to left with single tripartite mullioned and transomed window. Additional smaller, 20th-century, recessed, rendered gabled hall to outer left. Predominantly plate glass in timber sash-and-case windows. Corniced ashlar stacks with buff clay cans. Grey slate roof. Predominantly cast-iron rainwater goods. INTERIOR: central lobby with parquet flooring leading to scale-and-platt stair. Some cornices. Stone cellar with some brick partitions.

Listed Building Statement of Special Interest

Text courtesy of Historic Environment Scotland. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

An elegant, late-19th-century, Classical clubhouse still in its original use, occupying a corner site close to the heart of Hawick and designed by James Pearson Alison (1862-1932), Hawick's most prominent architect. Alison had commenced practice in the town in 1888 and remained there until his death in 1932, during which period he was responsible for a large number of buildings of widely varying types and styles, including the adjacent Congregational Church. Alison was assisted on this project, originally known as the Constitutional Club, by Alexander Inglis, who had been apprenticed to him in 1891 and remained as assistant. Inglis subsequently spent a brief period working in Edinburgh before returning to Hawick in 1902 to carry on his recently deceased uncle's joinery business as architect and contractor. Boxed-in transverse spandrels in the main part of the first-floor function room, which now has a false ceiling, suggest a hidden light cast-iron frame similar to that used by Alison for the halls at the former St George's West Church (now Teviot & Roberton Parish Church). The rear snooker hall also has a false ceiling. The second-floor flat, extending only across the north-eastern end of the main building and lit by the dormers on the side elevation, was originally the club master's residence. The clubhouse was constructed on the site of the East Toll, and cost £3,976 to build.

Listed Building References

Text courtesy of Historic Environment Scotland. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

Plans in Aitken Turnbull archive, Hawick. Shown on 2nd Edition Ordnance Survey map (1897). Licentiateship RIBA nomination papers of Alexander Inglis, 20 July 1911. R E Scott, Companion to Hawick and District, 3rd Edition (1998), pp32-3. Kitty Cruft, John Dunbar and Richard Fawcett, The Buildings of Scotland: Borders (2006), p362. Dictionary of Scottish Architects (www.scottisharchitects.org.uk) [accessed 29 August 2007].