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[9] [10] The complex also continued to serve as the local sheriff court throughout the 20th century and into the 21st century. In 2002, the Scottish Courts and Tribunals Service acquired County Buildings and implemented a major programme of refurbishment works which involved the conversion of County Buildings to create a second courtroom. The ...
Upload another image New Lanark, Scottish Wildlife Trust Visitor Centre (Former Foundry, Later Dyeworks) 55°39′42″N 3°46′49″W / 55.661704°N 3.780367°W / 55.661704; -3.780367 (New Lanark, Scottish Wildlife Trust Visitor Centre (Former Foundry, Later Dyeworks)) Category A 37055 Upload Photo Sisters Of Charity Convent, St Vincent Place 55°40′22″N 3°46′23″W ...
The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom (formerly the House of Lords, whose decisions are still binding).; Prior to the British exit from the European Union, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) had exclusive jurisdiction over the interpretation of European law.
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The scheme for classifying buildings in Scotland is: Category A: "buildings of national or international importance, either architectural or historic; or fine, little-altered examples of some particular period, style or building type."
In 1992, the tolbooth was acquired jointly by Clydesdale District Council and Lanark Community Council and placed in the ownership of a trust for preservation as a heritage centre. [4] In 2017, the ground floor was remodelled to create an art gallery so allowing the building to operate as a combined arts and heritage centre.
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Plaque on the building. The first judicial building in the town was the Falkirk Steeple which incorporated several prison cells and was completed in 1814. [2] [3] However, court hearings were held in various locations, including the Assembly Rooms at the corner of Rankine's Lane and The Pleasence, the Red Lion Inn in the High Street, and the sheriff's offices at 14 High Street.