List of listed buildings in Cults, Fife
List
Name | Location | Date Listed | Grid Ref. [note 1] | Geo-coordinates | Notes | LB Number [note 2] | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Crawford Priory Former Stable Block | 56°17′29″N 3°03′11″W | Category B | 2569 | ||||
Crawford Priory The Lodge (Formerly North Lodge), Gatepiers, And Gateway To North | 56°17′39″N 3°02′58″W | Category C(S) | 2570 | ||||
Cults Church, Cemetery Walls Gatepiers And Sessionhouse | 56°16′37″N 3°03′24″W | Category B | 2577 | ||||
Pitlessie Village Priestfield Maltings | 56°16′29″N 3°04′20″W | Category B | 2601 | ||||
Pitlessie Village Pitlessie House And Offices (Former Maltings) | 56°16′28″N 3°04′27″W | Category B | 2600 | ||||
Cults Manse Dovecot | 56°16′36″N 3°03′23″W | Category B | 2575 | ||||
Crawford Priory Dovecot | 56°17′25″N 3°03′21″W | Category B | 2568 | ||||
Crawford Priory Walton Hill Mausloeum, Enclosing Wall And Gatepiers | 56°16′51″N 3°02′28″W | Category B | 2572 | ||||
Cults Farmhouse And Gatepiers | 56°16′18″N 3°02′53″W | Category C(S) | 2578 | ||||
Springfield Village Church, Churchyard Walls And Gatepiers | 56°17′40″N 3°03′55″W | Category C(S) | 2603 | ||||
Pitlessie Village Pitlessie Arms | 56°16′26″N 3°04′28″W | Category C(S) | 137 | ||||
Pitlessie Village Ramornie Road-Bridge Over River Eden | 56°16′30″N 3°05′05″W | Category C(S) | 2602 | ||||
Pitlessie Village Dundas Cottage | 56°16′29″N 3°04′35″W | Category C(S) | 2599 | ||||
Crawford Priory Sundial | 56°17′15″N 3°03′05″W | Category B | 2571 | ||||
Crawford Priory West Gate Gatepiers At Bramble Cottage | 56°16′52″N 3°03′46″W | Category C(S) | 2573 | ||||
Crawford Priory West Gate Gatepiers At West Lodge | 56°16′51″N 3°03′51″W | Category C(S) | 2574 | ||||
Lower Bunzeon Farmhouse | 56°16′15″N 3°03′23″W | Category B | 2579 | ||||
Crawford Priory | 56°17′22″N 3°03′20″W | Category B | 2567 | ||||
Cults Manse Walled Garden And Outbuildings | 56°16′36″N 3°03′24″W | Category C(S) | 2576 |
Key
The scheme for classifying buildings in Scotland is:
- Category A: "buildings of national or international importance, either architectural or historic; or fine, little-altered examples of some particular period, style or building type."[1]
- Category B: "buildings of regional or more than local importance; or major examples of some particular period, style or building type, which may have been altered."[1]
- Category C: "buildings of local importance; lesser examples of any period, style, or building type, as originally constructed or moderately altered; and simple traditional buildings which group well with other listed buildings."[1]
In March 2016 there were 47,288 listed buildings in Scotland. Of these, 8% were Category A, and 50% were Category B, with the remaining 42% being Category C.[2]
gollark: There are the naïve enthusiastic people who go buy consumer IoT devices and them replace then when they inevitably stop being supported, the grizzled sysadmin/developer types who have seen the horrors of modern computing and don't trust it, the mystical few who are competent enough to run their own stuff and have it work, and people who want to be/think they are that but who spend all their time recompiling the kernel on their smart fridge.
gollark: https://pics.me.me/i-work-in-it-which-is-the-reason-our-house-41514357.png
gollark: There are multiple kinds of tech enthusiast.
gollark: A lot of the time you're just doing boring drudgery integrating other already-existing things, which will soon be significantly automated I think. Sometimes you actually need to spend time thinking about clever algorithms to do a thing, or how to make your thing go faster, or why your code mysteriously doesn't work, which is harder.
gollark: It's mentally challenging, sometimes, but obviously not particularly physically hard.
See also
Notes
- Sometimes known as OSGB36, the grid reference (where provided) is based on the British national grid reference system used by the Ordnance Survey.
• "Guide to National Grid". Ordnance Survey. Retrieved 2007-12-12.
• "Get-a-map". Ordnance Survey. Retrieved 2007-12-17. - Historic Environment Scotland assign a unique alphanumeric identifier to each designated site in Scotland, for listed buildings this always begins with "LB", for example "LB12345".
References
- All entries, addresses and coordinates are based on data from Historic Scotland. This data falls under the Open Government Licence
- "What is Listing?". Historic Environment Scotland. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
- Scotland's Historic Environment Audit 2016 (PDF). Historic Environment Scotland and the Built Environment Forum Scotland. pp. 15–16. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
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