Latitude: 56.3938 / 56°23'37"N
Longitude: -3.4261 / 3°25'33"W
OS Eastings: 312062
OS Northings: 723304
OS Grid: NO120233
Mapcode National: GBR 1Z.148D
Mapcode Global: WH6QC.BKR9
Plus Code: 9C8R9HVF+GH
Entry Name: 62, 64 Tay Street, Perth
Listing Name: 62-72 (Even Nos) Tay Street, Including Former Museum
Listing Date: 26 August 1977
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 385409
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB39658
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Perth, 62, 64 Tay Street
ID on this website: 200385409
Location: Perth
County: Perth and Kinross
Town: Perth
Electoral Ward: Perth City Centre
Traditional County: Perthshire
Tagged with: Architectural structure
John Young, 1879-1881; museum extended 1895, George Penrose Kennedy Young of John Young and Son; N end demolished after fire 1987 (see Notes). Well-detailed long range of tall 2-storey and attic, Flemish Renaissance (now, 2008) domestic and business premises with distinctive roof treatment, overlooking River Tay to E and Greyfriars Burial Ground to W. Stugged ashlar, base course, continuous ground floor hoodmould over round arched openings, dividing cill course, eaves cornice and quatrefoil pierced parapet. Segmental arched 1st floor windows, carved doorpieces, engaged columns with carved capitals, crowstepped gabled dormerheads and nepus gables articulate principal entrance bays. Some stone transoms and mullions. Raked cills, label stops, some with animal heads. Deep-set, single and 2-leaf, panelled and cross-braced timber doors under semicircular plate glass fanlights.
FURTHER DESCRIPTION: CENTRE BLOCK (FORMER MUSEUM): symmetrical 9-bay centre block (bays grouped 2-5-2) with dominant outer towers. Centre bay with steeply-gabled projecting stone doorpiece with Masonic compass in mandorla on tympanum (see Notes) and carved capitals of small animals peering out of foliage, timber door with brass letterbox marked 'MUSEUM' and round arched dormerheaded attic window. Tower to right also with steeply-gabled doorpiece similar to above, machicolated nepus gable with square-headed window under stepped hoodmould and flanking corbelled 2-stage angle turrets. Tower to left piercing roofline above 1st floor and incorporating 2 windows at ground, corbelled tripartite oriel window at 1st floor, single window and gunloop above, and paired stack to left.
NOS 68 AND 70 (LEFT OF CENTRE): 5 asymmetrical bays (grouped 2-3) immediately to left of centre block comprising slightly projecting 2-storey and attic gabled bays at left with window and door below corbelled, tripartite oriel window and glazed arrowslit in gablehead; bays to right with centre window and flanking doors below regular fenestration, small later dormer to right behind parapet, both ground floor windows bipartite with decorative astragals.
NOS 72 AND 62, 64 (FLANKING OUTER BLOCKS): symmetrically disposed outer bays. Each block with regular fenestration flanking centre entrance bay. 5 bays to No 72 (grouped 2-1-2) at left (S) with arrowslit in stepped and shouldered nepus gable flanked by later set-back dormer windows. 9 bays to Nos 62 and 64 (grouped 4-1-4) at right (N) with columned doorpiece and round headed window below trefoil detail in crowstepped dormerhead. Door to outer right bay.
Plate glass glazing in timber sash and case windows. Grey slates. Coped ashlar stacks with some cans, ashlar-coped skews and gablet crowsteps. Cast iron downpipes with decorative rainwater hoppers and fixings.
Overlooking the west bank of the River Tay with Kinnoull hill beyond, on a principal Perth thoroughfare, this fine run of high quality later 19th century Flemish Renaissance-inspired architecture is centred around the former Perthshire Natural History Museum, which opened in 1883. An imposing and well-preserved example, by important local architect John Young, the building retains much of its original gravitas and contributes significantly to the streetscape. Built as Moncrieff Natural History Museum, Opera House, studio and boys and girls hall, with Museum at centre. The museum extension was carried out by George Penrose Kennedy Young (born 1858) who was taken into partnership with his father in 1885. Early photographs show the museum interior with a galleried hall incorporating ornate cast iron balustrades and an arcaded top stage with glazed roof. Perthshire Natural History Museum was built for the Perthshire Society of Natural Science, in memory of Sir Thomas Moncrieffe, past president of the Society. The building and collections were given to the Town Council in 1902, and the Tay Street museum was closed in 1934 when the collections were moved to the new Art Gallery and Museum in George Street. The Tay Street museum was subsequently used as a Masonic Hall, hence the Masonic insignia carved on the doorpiece.
John Young travelled widely looking at Opera Houses to inform his design for Perth Opera House. The opening concert was Handel's Messiah, but the company folded after only ten years and the building became a Baptist Church some time around 1893. It continued as such until 1984 when it was destroyed by fire.
Formerly listed as Tay Street 56-72 and 2-6 Canal Street (Baptist Church). 56, 58 and 60 Tay Street and 2-6 Canal Street were all destroyed by fire in 1984 and the site is now occupied by Quayside Court and No 60 Tay Street, 4-storey housing by Ian Burke Associates built in 1987.
List description and statutory address updated at resurvey (2009).
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
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