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Hopetoun House, estate buildings. View of steading.
WL 3405
Description Hopetoun House, estate buildings. View of steading.
Date 1975 to 1976
Collection List C Survey
Catalogue Number WL 3405
Category Photographs and Off-line Digital Images
Copies SC 766989, SC 1648028
Scope and Content Steading, Hopetoun House, West Lothian This shows the gable of the steading attached to the Hopetoun estate. This large building is built of rubble with smooth ashlar dressings, and features a central arched doorway. Two barred windows on first floor level and ridge ventilators indicate the position of the hay-loft. The steading would be used as a base from which to manage the farmland and animals owned by the estate. A farm manager (who would be given a substantial house as part of his job) would be employed to supervise a team of servants who would often sleep in part of the steading. Hopetoun House, the seat of the Marquis of Linlithgow, was built 1699-1704 to designs by architect Sir William Bruce (c.1630-1710). Between 1721 and 1748 architect William Adam (1689-1748), and his sons Robert (1728-92) and John (1721-92) designed extensions to the central block, flanked by curving colonnades leading to advanced pavilions containing stables (north) and a ballroom (south). Source: RCAHMS contribution to SCRAN.
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/collection/415726
Attribution: © Crown Copyright: HES (List C Survey)
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