Latitude: 55.7263 / 55°43'34"N
Longitude: -4.1918 / 4°11'30"W
OS Eastings: 262446
OS Northings: 650273
OS Grid: NS624502
Mapcode National: GBR 3V.D870
Mapcode Global: WH4R0.LB4H
Plus Code: 9C7QPRG5+G7
Entry Name: Auldhouse Arms, 8-12 (Even Nos) Langland Place
Listing Name: 8-12 (Even Nos) Langland Place, Auldhouse Arms
Listing Date: 26 June 2008
Category: C
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 399964
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB51123
Building Class: Cultural
ID on this website: 200399964
Location: East Kilbride
County: South Lanarkshire
Electoral Ward: Avondale and Stonehouse
Parish: East Kilbride
Traditional County: Lanarkshire
Circa 1800. Single-story, 6-bay, public house with notable interior scheme (see Notes). Rendered rubble with raised cills and margins abutting eaves. Cast-iron window and door grates; metal signage above door with scrolled cast-iron decoration. Adjoining to left (internally linked to rear - 1990s), 2-storey building; pink, squared and snecked sandstone rubble with chamfered margins; raised cills; pair of pitched-roof, finialled dormers breaking eaves.
Grey slate roofs. Ashlar skews, Coped end stacks, clay cans. Cast-iron rain water goods.
INTERIOR: vestibule with off-sales hatch and small, self-contained snug through door to right (all 1970s). Entrance to public bar through door to left. Three-quarter-height matchboard panelling with dentilled cornice throughout. Fine 1920s quarter-circle gantry with four upright spirit barrels and curved bar counter with scrolled brackets. Green tiled fireplace in partitioned section to W. Panelled snug to rear W with integrated timber bench seating and further tiled fireplace. Good collection of brewery and whiskey mirrors. Passage to rear leading to refurbished lounge bar, dining room and function room within adjoined 2-storey property to W. Large, timber chimneypiece to main dining room with carved double Corinthian columns to sides.
The single-storey Auldhouse Arms is a good example of a unified 19th century public house interior with fine quality 1920s additions. Of particular note are the quarter-circle gantry and counter bar, panelled snug to rear and tiled fireplaces. Photographic evidence c.1900 shows the original opening to the single-storey bar at the 3rd bay with piended slate-roof porch above. This entrance has since been converted to form a window. The public bar entrance is now at the 5th bay which was formerly a grocers and confectioners occupying the far right of the building. The shop was incorporated into the main body of the pub in the 1970s and converted to provide an additional snug area. Listed as part of the Public Houses Thematic Study 2007-08.
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