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| Essential
Architecture- Search by style
Scottish Baronial Style Architecture |
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| Greenock Sheriff Court displays
crow-stepped gables and corbelled corner turrets. |
Balmoral Castle shows the final
Victorian embodiment of the style. A principal keep similar to Craigievar is
the heart of the castle, while a large turreted country house is attached |
Abbotsford House, the residence the famous
novelist and poet, Sir Walter Scott (on the Tweed River in the Scottish
Border Country). |
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| Aberdeen Grammar School |
Larnach Castle in Dunedin, New
Zealand. A castle with a verandah. |
Casa Loma was built on a hilltop site in
Toronto in 1911 – 14 for Sir Henry Pellatt. |
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| Casa Loma |
Banff Springs Hotel in the Banff
National Park in Alberta, Canada. |
Skibo Castle, Scotland. |
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| This style is a masculine anglisization of the
American/European Chateauesque revival of Loire
Valley Chateau style. |
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Scottish baronial style
The Scottish Baronial style is part of the Gothic revival in architectural
styles, drawing on stylistic elements and forms from castles, tower houses
and mansions of the Renaissance period in Scotland, such as Craigievar
Castle and Newark Castle, Port Glasgow. The revival style was popular from
the early 19th century until World War I. One of the earliest examples of
Scottish Baronial style was Abbotsford House, the residence the famous
novelist and poet, Sir Walter Scott, built for himself on the Tweed River in
the Scottish Border Country.
Buildings of the style frequently feature towers further adorned by small
turrets. Roof lines are uneven, their crenelated battlements often broken by
stepped gables. While small lancet windows may appear in towers and gables,
large bay windows of plate glass were not uncommon, but even these would
often have their individual roofs adorned by pinnacles and crenelation.
Porches, porticos and porte-cocheres, were often given the full castle
treatment, an imitation portcullis on the larger houses would occasionally
be suspended above a front door, flanked by heraldic beasts and other
medieval architectural motifs. This architectural style was often employed
for public buildings, such as Aberdeen Grammar School. However, it was by no
means confined to Scotland and is, in truth, a fusion of the Gothic revival
castle architecture first employed by Horace Walpole for his Twickenham
villa, Strawberry Hill, and the ancient Scottish defensive tower houses. In
the 19th century it became fashionable for private houses to be built with
small turrets and dubbed in Scottish Baronial style. In fact the
architecture often had little in common with tower houses, which retained
their defensive functions and fell short of 19th century ideas of comfort.
The Scottish Baronial style was promoted by such architects as Edward Blore,
this form of architecture was popular in the dominions of the British
Empire.
In Ireland a young English architect of the York School of Architecture,
George Fowler Jones, designed Castle Oliver, a 110 room mansion of approx
29,000 sq ft, built in a similar pink sandstone to Belfast Castle. Castle
Oliver had all the classic hallmarks of the style, including battlements,
porte-cochere, crow-stepped gables, numerous turrets, arrow slits, spiral
stone staircases, and conical 'witch's hat' roofs. (see below, External
Links)
In New Zealand it was advocated by the architect Robert Lawson who designed
frequently in this style most notably at Larnach Castle in Dunedin. Other
examples in New Zealand include works by Francis Petre. In Toronto Casa Loma
was built on a hilltop site, 1911 – 14, for Sir Henry Pellatt, a prominent
financier and industrialist. His architect, E. J. Lennox, provided him with
battlements and towers, tempered by modern plumbing and other conveniences.
Another Canadian example is the Banff Springs Hotel in the Banff National
Park in Alberta, Canada. This hotel is still very much in use.
The style was popular in Scotland and was applied to many relatively modest
dwellings by architects such as Edward Calvert. Ironically, several real
Scottish castles were rebuilt in the Scottish Baronial style. During the
19th century it became fashionable for the aristocracy to leave London to
visit Scotland during the month of August for the shooting, and many
aristocrats favoured this style for the shooting and sporting estates they
created at this time in Scotland, often building "castles" of immense
proportions such as Skibo Castle and Balmoral Castle.
The 20th-century Scottish Baronial castles have had the reputation of
architectural follies. Among most patrons and architects the style fell from
favour along with the Gothic revival in the early years of the 20th
century.[hide]
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