List of listed buildings in Riccarton, East Ayrshire

This is a list of listed buildings in the parish of Riccarton in East Ayrshire, Scotland.

List

Name Location Date Listed Grid Ref. [note 1] Geo-coordinates Notes LB Number [note 2] Image
Caprington Mains 55°35′35″N 4°32′04″W Category C(S) 50113
Caprington Castle 55°35′38″N 4°31′42″W Category A 18517
Aird 55°34′07″N 4°25′57″W Category B 18520
Caprington Castle, Gardener's Cottage 55°35′29″N 4°31′31″W Category B 18515
Shaw's Mill Bridge 55°34′11″N 4°26′01″W Category C(S) 18521
Walled Garden, Dallars 55°34′18″N 4°26′30″W Category B 19886
Stables, Dallars 55°34′20″N 4°26′17″W Category B 18510
Dovecote, Treesbank 55°34′43″N 4°30′31″W Category A 18512
Caprington Castle, Walled Garden 55°35′31″N 4°31′28″W Category C(S) 18516
West Lodge, Caprington 55°35′30″N 4°31′56″W Category B 18518
Dallars House 55°34′22″N 4°26′16″W Category B 18522
Woodhead Farm 55°34′44″N 4°25′31″W Category C(S) 18519
Shawhill 55°36′28″N 4°26′49″W Category B 19887
Stables, Caprington 55°35′35″N 4°31′49″W Category B 19888
Dallars Mains, Including Dovecote 55°34′19″N 4°26′37″W Category B 18511
Haining Mains 55°35′04″N 4°26′55″W Category C(S) 18513
Barleith 55°35′28″N 4°27′08″W Category C(S) 18514
Hurlford Primary School Including Boundary Walls, Gates And Railings 55°36′02″N 4°27′21″W Category B 43522

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: Pings exist but I don't think they happen automatically and CC can't trigger them.
gollark: I'd probably also add pings for autoreconnect, UUIDs for messages, maaaaybe a paired fallback server, and set_channels instead of open and close.
gollark: (skynetv2 is the current one, v3 is hypothetical future skynet)
gollark: SPUDNET, which has more active evolution and also possibly asynchronous commands, does have a command ID option in its v4 protocol, which could be backported to skynetv3 or something.
gollark: Fair.

See also

Notes

  1. 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.
  2. 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

  1. "What is Listing?". Historic Environment Scotland. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  2. 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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