Gardyne's Land, Dundee
Gardyne's Land is a group of buildings in High Street, Dundee, Scotland. It is a complex of five buildings, representing the earliest surviving domestic buildings in Dundee.
Description
Gardynes Land consists of a complex of five buildings: a L-plan three-storey merchant's house from around 1560; lodgings from around 1640; a tenement from around 1790; billiard hall from around 1820 and a Victorian retail unit from around 1845.[1] The merchant's house is the only domestic building surviving from the time, when Dundee was Scotland's second largest city. All of the buildings are Category A listed buildings.[2][3] The buildings came to the attention of the Tayside Building Preservation Trust in 1995, a limited company with charitable status which exists to restore and reuse buildings of architectural or historic interest at risk in Tayside.[4] Between 1997 and 2000, the buildings were acquired by the trust and funds were raised for the project. A first phase of wind and waterproof works commenced in 2000. Between 2000 and 2003, a professional team were appointed and plans were first drawn up and approved for conversion into hostel use.[4] In April 2005, the project was handed over to Dundee City Council. The restoration of Gardyne's Land has received awards from the Dundee Civic Trust, Dundee Institute of Architects, the Royal Town planning institute, a Scottish award for quality in planning and regeneration and renewal magazine.[4]
Notes
- ↑ McKean & Walker 1985, p. 18; Dragging a building into the 21st Century; Gardyne's Land wins multiple awards
- ↑ Dragging a building into the 21st Century
- ↑ "Gardyne's Land, Category A listing", Historic Scotland, February 4, 1965, retrieved March 27, 2012
- 1 2 3 Gardyne's Land wins multiple awards
References
- "Gardyne's Land wins multiple awards". University of Dundee. 2009. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
- "Dragging a building into the 21st Century", Scottish Planner, p. 11, July, 2010 Check date values in:
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(help) - McKean, Charles; Walker, David (1985), Dundee: an illustrated introduction, Edinburgh: The Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland and Scottish Academic Press
- Walker, D.M. (1968), "The Architecture of Dundee", in Jones, S.J., Dundee and District, Dundee: Dundee Local Executive Committee of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, pp. 284–300
Coordinates: 56°27′40″N 2°58′11″W / 56.4610°N 2.9697°W