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Signal Station Guard House, Battery Road, North Queensferry

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Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved. © Copyright and database right 2025. Public Sector Viewing Terms

General Details and Location

Category
AT RISK
Name of Building
Signal Station Guard House
Other Name(s)
Address
Battery Road, North Queensferry
Locality
Postcode
Planning Authority
Divisional Area
Reference No
5877
Listing Category
B
OS Grid Ref
NT 13387 80214
Location Type
Urban
HS Reference No
9980

Description

Gate lodge: single storey; rectangular-plan sentinel lodge. Rendered; wide base course; stone cills, round-arched windows now blocked. Central door to E; 2 windows to S; window to W; truncated central stack and flue raised out from N wall. Flat roof.

Former accommodation of married Coast Guard officers, patrolmen and their families. The property was effected as a result of the Forth Bridge Railway Act of 1873, which gave the Company the right to acquire the old Coast Guard Station to make way for the building of the then new Forth Bridge. However, the Company was obliged to construct suitable new Coast Guard buildings to the satisfaction of the Admiralty. It was as late as 1911 before the site was disponed to the Admiralty by the Bridge Company, the site being occupied between 1873-1911 under the terms of the Act. In 1899 the Royal Navy took over an area of the site and formed a gun battery which was used during the First World War. Prior to this, the six cottages were built between 1882 and 1883 as a Coast Guard Station and these consisted of an officer's house, five cottages and a Watch House, also known as High Battery (formally to E of cottages). The present signal station tower was erected around 1917 and it was at this time that the Coast Guard Station was dis-used. The cottages were used between the Wars to accommodate the Forth River Pilots. It is understood that there were no gun emplacements on the site during the Second World War. The existing external WCs became redundant and are now used as stores. (Historic Scotland)
Building Dates
Probably late 19th or early 20th century
Architects

Category of Risk and Development History

Condition
Poor
Category of Risk
Moderate
Exemptions to State of Risk
Field Visits
27/5/2014, 29/4/2019
Development History
27 May 2014: External inspection finds the former lodge now in poor condition; the flat roof is in poor condition and requires maintenance, walls are cracking and appear damp and timber elements are in need of repair. The building is disused.
29 April 2019: External inspection finds that the building is in much the same condition as previously seen and continues to slowly deteriorate.

Guides to Development

Conservation Area
North Queensferry
Planning Authority Contact
PAC Telephone Number

Availability

Current Availability
Unknown
Appointed Agents
Price
Occupancy
Vacant
Occupancy Type
N/A
Present/Former Uses
Name of Owners
Unverified see FAQ on ascertaining ownership
Type of Ownership
Unknown

Information Services

Additional Contacts/Information Source
Bibliography
Online Resources
Classification
Shipping
Original Entry Date
25-NOV-14
Date of Last Edit
14/07/2023