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Former Gordon Highlander's Barracks, designed by J and W Wittet, opened in 1935, and closed as barracks in the 1980s. Built of squared, pinned granite rubble with finely tooled ashlar dressings and long and short quoins. The single-storey, 5-bay guard room with a wide verandah to the north. There are four squared gatepiers with chamfered angles and angled caps, the central two with bronze lamps, and wrought iron gates. The company office is a single-storey, 5-bay block with a wide verandah to the north. A 2-storey, 9-bay Junior Officer's Club building is of symmetrical design with baronial detailing, the central 3 bays taller and advanced, and with a Royal coat of arms. The Officer's Mess is a long 2-storey range, the centre block 7-bay and advanced, with two lower, recessed blocks, of 7-bays to the west and four bays to the east. The other ranks' mess is single storey and 7-bay. Married quarters type IV comprise a 2-storey, semi-detached pair of houses with advanced end bays: type III is detached. The medical reception block comprises 3 linked blocks, the central 2-storey with an attached single storey front block, the side pavilions single storey with low linking corridors. The depot office is single storey, of 5 bays with a wide verandah to the west. The gymnasium is a tall gable block flat roofed changing rooms to the north, and Venetian windows in the gables. Barracks block D is single-storey and 7-bay, blocks A and B 2-storey and 7-bay, One of the barrack blocks was destroyed during a bombing rate in 1943, as commemorated in a memorial stone which stands at the front entrance to the Gordon Highlander's Museum (NJ90NW1090).
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