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Kilmarnock, Green Street, Pedestrian Underpass

Subway (20th Century)

Site Name Kilmarnock, Green Street, Pedestrian Underpass

Classification Subway (20th Century)

Alternative Name(s) Burns Precinct; Palace Theatre

Canmore ID 295145

Site Number NS43NW 466

NGR NS 42946 37960

NGR Description From NS 42985 37956 to NS 42929 37963

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/295145

Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved.
Canmore Disclaimer. © Copyright and database right 2024.

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Digital Images

Administrative Areas

  • Council East Ayrshire
  • Parish Kilmarnock
  • Former Region Strathclyde
  • Former District Kilmarnock And Loudoun
  • Former County Ayrshire

Architecture Notes

NS43NW 466 42946 37960

Concrete pedestrian subway leading from the Palace Theatre (NS43NW 155) to the Burns Shopping Precinct (NS43NW 465). Notable for prominent semi official grafitti.

Activities

Field Visit (4 March 1999)

NS43NW 466 42946 37960

Concrete pedestrian subway leading from the Palace Theatre (NS43NW 155) to the Burns Shopping Precinct (NS43NW 465). Notable for prominent semi official grafitti.

Visited by RCAHMS (MH), 23 February 1999

Project

Recording Scotland's graffiti project was designed to review the range of historic and contemporary graffiti art across Scotland. It involved desk-based assessment and fieldwork at a number of example sites, to consider recording methodologies and dissemination practices.

Between 2016 and 2017, phase 1 of the project aimed to:

Aim 1: review a range of historic and contemporary graffiti art from across Scotland, already present in Canmore.

Aim2: undertake a research review of previous approaches to recording graffiti art in Canmore and other HERs, review and develop the current Thesaurus terms.

Aim 3: test and develop a range of recording methods within the following programmes or projects: Discovering the Clyde programme (1223), Scotland’s Urban Past (1222), Architecture and Industry projects, such as Urban Recording Projects (1028), Area Photographic Survey (311) and the Tomintoul and Glenlivet Landscape Partnership (1167).

Aim 4: the following test sites will be considered for research into the range of historic and contemporary graffiti. They will be analysed to demonstrate the different ages, contexts, styles and survivals of historic and contemporary graffiti: Polphail village (Canmore ID 299112), Scalan farmstead (170726), Cowcaddens Subway Station (243099), Croick Parish Church (12503), Dalbeattie Armament Depot (76279) and Dumbarton Rock (43376).

Aim 5: to research the potential for social media to play a role in crowd-sourcing information and archiving Scotland’s graffiti art.

In 2017-2019, phase 2 of the project aimed to:

Aim 1: To enhance the NRHE to the point at which it can be said to adequately represent the broad range of historic and modern graffiti that is evident throughout Scotland, and to explore ways by which that information can best be disseminated.

Aim 2: To develop guidelines that will convey the HES approach to researching and recording graffiti.

Aim 3: To write a specification for a book on Scotland’s graffiti.

Aim 4: To develop external partnerships to explore further ways to record graffiti and to identify and explore potential funding streams to enable further knowledge exchange and research.

The project was managed by Dr Alex Hale, with contributions from staff across Herirtage and Commercial and Tourism directorates.

References

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