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Cockpen and Carrington Parish Church

Cockpen and Carrington Parish Church is located to the south of the town of Bonnyrigg in Midlothian, Scotland. It is a congregation of the Church of Scotland. The parish includes the south side of the town of Bonnyrigg (including the new housing development at Hopefield), plus the rural area to the south of the town (including the village of Carrington). The current arrangement dates from 1975, when the parish churches of Cockpen and Carrington were united (and the former Carrington Parish Church ceased to be used). The former Carrington Parish Church building was built in 1711 (and has now been adapted for use as an open plan office); until 1975 it was linked with Temple Parish Church in Midlothian (which is also now closed). Cockpen Parish Church (now Cockpen and Carrington Parish Church) was designed in 1816 by Richard Crichton and built by his apprentices R & R Dickson from 1817 to 1820, following Crichton's premature death. It is a Category A listed building and is still in regular use. The current building replaced an older structure. The church's tower is unusually tall for a comparatively small church and its design was copied, on a larger scale, for Kilconquhar Parish Church in Fife.

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716 m

Cockpen

Cockpen est un village du Midlothian, en Écosse.
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765 m

Château de Dalhousie

Le château de Dalhousie est un château fort des XIIIe et XVIIe siècles situé à Bonnyrigg dans le Midlothian à 13 km au sud d’Édimbourg en Écosse. Il sert d'hôtel et de restaurant de luxe depuis 1972.
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1.3 km

Bonnyrigg

Bonnyrigg est une ville du Midlothian en Écosse. La ville comptait 14 663 habitants en 2001 et 15 677 selon le recensement de 2011.
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1.4 km

Newtongrange

Newtongrange est un ancien village minier dans le Midlothian, en Écosse.
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3.1 km

Mavisbank House

Mavisbank est une maison de campagne à l'extérieur de Loanhead, au sud d'Édimbourg, dans le Midlothian, en Écosse. Elle est conçue par l'architecte William Adam en collaboration avec son client, Sir John Clerk of Penicuik, et est construite entre 1723 et 1727. Première villa palladienne en Écosse, elle est décrite par Historic Scotland comme "l'une des maisons de campagne les plus importantes d'Écosse". Elle est modifiée au XIXe siècle, mais subit des décennies de négligence au XXe siècle. Les intérieurs sont ravagés par un incendie en 1973 et la maison reste en ruine.