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Latitude: 55.9494 / 55°56'57"N
Longitude: -3.1943 / 3°11'39"W
OS Eastings: 325516
OS Northings: 673574
OS Grid: NT255735
Mapcode National: GBR 8NG.GS
Mapcode Global: WH6SL.XQ3G
Plus Code: 9C7RWRX4+Q7
Entry Name: 17 James' Court, 507 Lawnmarket, Edinburgh
Listing Name: 503-509 (Odd Nos) Lawnmarket and 13-17A (Odd Nos) James Court
Listing Date: 14 December 1970
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 395654
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB48245
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Edinburgh, 507 Lawnmarket, 17 James' Court
ID on this website: 200395654
Circa 1795. 5-storey and attic 6-bay tenement with shops to ground floor and flat-arched entrances to pends (Mid and West Entries to James Court) to outer right and in 3rd bay from left. Grey ashlar, painted to ground; rubble to rear. Eaves course. Regularly fenestrated, but floor levels different in 3 bays to left and right. Projecting cills. Modern shop front to left (continuous to Milne's Court); consoled, modillioned cornice and Corinthian pilasters to shop to right. 4 slated piend-roofed dormers to attic. Turnpike stair to flats in pend.
REAR (JAMES COURT) ELEVATIONS: single bay to left, over round-arched entrance to pend. Narrow canted bay (windows lighting stair) in re-entrant angle. Broad projecting bay with tripartite windows to each floor to centre (later harled flat-roofed single storey building adjoining to ground). Narrow bay over pend. 4-storey piend-roofed wing to right: regularly fenestrated; modern timber panelled door in bolection-moulded surround to 17A to N elevation.
12-pane glazing in 3 bays to right, plate glass in 3 bays to left, in timber sash and case windows. Grey slates. Tall corniced stacks (brick to right, stone to left) with circular cans.
In 1723-7 James Brownhill (following the precedent of Robert Mylne at Milne's Court) demolished closes running N/S to form a square court, building a tall double tenement to the N (all but the E section of which was destroyed in a fire in 1857), but leaving the old buildings facing the Lawnmarket. Those to the W of Gladstone's Land were replaced circa 1795
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