View from North-West. Digital image of G 85076 PO.
SC 750005
Description View from North-West. Digital image of G 85076 PO.
Date c. 1920
Collection Collection of photographs from Country Life, publishers, London, England
Catalogue Number SC 750005
Category Photographs and Off-line Digital Images
Copy of G 85076 PO
Scope and Content Hamilton Palace (site), Hamilton, South Lanarkshire, from north-west This oblique view from the north-west exhibits the massively overpowering scale of the additions made by the 10th Duke which enveloped all earlier building fabric. It was evidently at this western (nearer) end of the main block, below the large new dining room which took up the entire first floor, that wall foundations of 2.7m thickness were encountered during demolition in 1927, possibly a long-encapsulated fragment of 'The Orchard', its medieval predecessor. Adjacent to the west wall of the palace, occupying a site where service buildings had stood since at least the late 16th century, is the two-storeyed court of offices as redesigned and reconstructed by the 10th Duke and David Hamilton in about 1825. Between 1822 and 1828 the north front of Hamilton Palace was massively enlarged and enhanced by Alexander, 10th Duke of Hamilton (1767-1852) working in collaboration with the distinguished Glasgow architect, David Hamilton (1768-1843), whose design represented an interpretation of the 1819 drawings of the Neapolitan architect Francesco Saponieri. The old north front was replaced by a monumental edifice 80.5m long, the façade of which was centred upon a colossal portico of hexastyle (that is, of six column) form and Corinthian Order. Source: RCAHMS contribution to SCRAN.
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/collection/750005
File Format (TIF) Tagged Image File Format bitmap
Attribution & Restricted Use Summary
Attribution: © Copyright: Country Life. Courtesy of HES.
Licence Type: Limited
You may solely view this material on the Canmore Site. No other use is permitted.