Site of St John's Works
| Building summary | |
|---|---|
| [photo awaited] | |
| Name | St John's Works |
| Address | |
| Postcode | |
| Other names | |
| Date | 1901 onwards |
| Architect | C.H. Armour |
| See map | Map T (12) |
| Map D (49) | |
| OS grid ref | |
| Latitude & longitude | |
| what3words | ///unearthly.tries.larger |
St John's Works was a factory, occupying a large area to the south of Falkland, between East Loan and Well Brae.
Further references
"Linoleum Works, Well Brae. Large, in red brick, by C. H. Armour, 1931.[1]
"The Co-operative Factory at Falkland moved George Scott-Moncrieff to generalise, somewhat unjustly (on all parties) 'Co-operative architecture in Scotland merits any abuses that may be levelled against it; it combines all the dignity of fish-and-chip saloons with the popular appeal of bank buildings'."[2]
Notes
- ↑ Gifford, Fife, page 218.
- ↑ Pride, Kingdom of Fife, page 87.