Latitude: 55.9501 / 55°57'0"N
Longitude: -3.1843 / 3°11'3"W
OS Eastings: 326141
OS Northings: 673636
OS Grid: NT261736
Mapcode National: GBR 8QG.HK
Mapcode Global: WH6SM.1PYZ
Plus Code: 9C7RXR28+27
Entry Name: Tweeddale House, 5-11 Tweeddale Court, 14 High Street, Edinburgh
Listing Name: 14 High Street, 5-11 (Odd Nos) Tweddale Court (Including Former Tweddale House and 9-11 Fountain Close)
Listing Date: 14 December 1970
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 368252
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB29057
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Edinburgh, 14 High Street, 5 - 11 Tweeddale Court, Tweeddale House
ID on this website: 200368252
Location: Edinburgh
County: Edinburgh
Town: Edinburgh
Electoral Ward: City Centre
Traditional County: Midlothian
Tagged with: Building
Dated 1576. Remodelled and extended 17th century onwards (see Notes). Interesting and historically complex collection of residential and commercial buildings to S and E sides of Tweedale Court with 16th century townhouse at its core and additions to N and W including Gibbsian doorpiece with Roman Doric porch. Rubble with mix of chamfered and moulded ashlar dressings.
FURTHER DESCRIPTION: PRINCIPAL (S) ELEVATION: 2-storey with attic and laigh floor, 3-bay, painted with doorpiece to centre. Steps at re-entrant angle leading to lower laigh floor level. 3-storey, 8-bay to rear with regular fenestration.
EXTENSION TO W (NOS 9 AND 11 FOUNTAIN CLOSE): 2 storey and attic, 4-bay with doorway at ground floor right and forestair leading through archway to 1st floor entrance at W gable end.
RANGE TO E SIDE OF TWEEDDALE COURT (NOS 5 AND 7): 3-storey and attic, 5-bay former industrial buildings now converted to residential. No 5 with shallow segmental-arched recess at 1st floor containing cast-iron winch with ornamental ironwork to spandrel. Door to E elevation with fanlight and unusual ogee-arched traceried ashlar detail above. To left, corbelling at ground floor corner-angle. Decorative wrought-iron entrance gates to Tweddale Court link No 5 to fragment of freestanding wall (see separate listing).
12-pane timber sash and case windows. Scottish slate. Broad harled stacks with clay cans. Cast-iron rainwater goods.
INTERIOR: 16th century section: barrel-vaulted entrance hall. Door to N wall with date 1576 with initials of Neil Laing and his wife Elizabeth Danielstoune, and inscription 'The Feir Of The Lord Preservith The Lyfe'. Arched buffet recesses to large hall behind. Chamber to E with aumbry containing painted guilloche design. Moulded doors and fireplaces. First floor (former High Dining Room) with plaster ceiling by James Nisbet 1782. Adam-style timber bookcases with pilasters added 1827. Pilastered doorpieces with block pediment and crenellated parapet. Further Neo-Classical detail in room to E. Sections of 1752 bellcast roof beneath pitched roof circa 1800. W extension circa 1791: two groin-vaulted rooms at ground floor. Flue and iron safety rails set within stoneflagged floor. Room to 1st floor with iron safe embedded within wall.
The former Tweeddale House is an interesting survival of a 16th century town house with a complex building history, having been adapted and extended throughout the centuries by a range of renowned architects. Its prominent Roman Doric doorpiece is unusual for a building of this type, providing interest and character. The building is noteworthy for a number of interesting interior details including a door inside the original N house wall dated 1576, the barrel-vaulted hall, painted aumbry and the groin-vaulted rooms within the former Linen Bank section to the West.
Probably built by Neil Laing, the Keeper of the Signet, the house takes its name from John 1st Marquess of Tweeddale to whom it was left in 1645 by his grandmother Lady Margaret Ker. There is evidence of an earlier stair-tower to the W elevation with a small yard enclosed by a screen wall to the S elevation. The 16th century house was probably converted to a double pile by extending to the N around 1600. The structure was recast in 1664 by the renowned Scottish architect, Sir William Bruce. Sold to the 2nd Earl of Tweeddale in 1670 who bought the adjacent tenement to the N and incorporated it into the building. Reconstructed again by John and Robert Adam in 1752-3 at which time the Gibbsian doorpiece was added. In 1782 the mason-architect John Hay rebuilt the N gable and E wall of the N wing in brick. It was the headquarters of the British Linen Bank from 1791-1807, at which time the Roman Doric porch was added and the building extended to the W (now Nos 9-11 Fountain Close). The house then passed to the Edinburgh printers, Oliver and Boyd who altered the interior to create larger workshops. The buildings currently remain in use, predominantly as a publishers (2008).
Part of B-Group with '14 High Street, Sedan Chair House' and 'Cowgate, Gateway at East of St Patricks Roman Catholic Church' (see Separate Listings) highlighting contextual interest.
List description and Statutory Address updated at resurvey (2007-08).
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