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Field Visit
Date 12 March 2019
Event ID 1090595
Category Recording
Type Field Visit
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1090595
This underground operations block, which is deeply cut into an ESE-facing slope, formed part of the infrastructure of the battery introduced by the Army during World War 2. Upcast from the excavation has been piled to its ENE and SSE. The block measures 10.5m from NNW to SSE by 9.2m overall. It has a flat, reinforced cast concrete roof, waterproofed with a layer of bitumen above which are traces of the turf that was originally employed as camouflage. At least six circular vents convey air to the rooms below, while the rising ground to both the WSW and NNW is buttressed by a reinforced concrete wall that forms one side of a stairwell located at the building’s NW corner. The other sides of the stairwell are bordered by a lower, less substantial wall that retain traces of a metal safety rail. A flight of steps leads down to a whitewashed cement-rendered corridor that provides access to three compartments to its ENE. The largest compartment, occupying the NNW section of the building, is reached via a metal framed doorway situated at the foot of the steps. This leads directly into a second corridor, which is partly vented by an aperture protected by an iron cowl in the stairwell. This corridor runs NNW where an entrance leads into the compartment. Its walls and ceiling are whitewashed, while the floor is crossed by electrical cable ducts at right angles. There are no fittings, although the former presence of electrical equipment can be detected on the walls. A second doorway in the main corridor provides access to two further compartments occupying the SSE part of the building. The more westerly, which is brick-lined and whitewashed may have been a communications room. A small, but neat pencilled graffito on a single brick in the SSE wall depicts a field gun accompanied by the letters, ‘RA’ (Royal Artillery). An electrical cable duct adjacent to the NNW wall leads into a narrow, cement-rendered, whitewashed compartment, which also has ducts against both its NNW and ENE walls. Narrow robber trenches emerging at the NNE and SSE corners of the building indicate that electrical cables once ran down the slope towards both the Battery Observation Post (NH86NW 9.7) and the Fire Command Post (NH86NW 9.3).
Visited by HES, Survey and Recording (ATW, AKK), 12 March 2019.