Angus HER - NO25NE0025 - BALINTORE CASTLE, GLENISLA

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Main Details

Primary ReferenceNO25NE0025
NameBALINTORE CASTLE, GLENISLA
NRHE Card No.NO25NE25
NRHE Numlink 31001
HES SM No. NULL
HES LB No. 13757
Site Form Standing Structure
Site Condition Complete 2
Details Castle (category A-listed) in the form of a Scots Baronial mansion, and a C-listed kennel. The mansion was built in 1859-60 to the design of William Burn, Architect, and is also spelled as 'Balentore Castle'. The kennels were built around the same time. It is shown on the 1st edition OS map as a rectangular house with an L-plan wing to the north. There are rectangular buildings depicted as offices to the north-west. On the 2nd edition OS map the offices are depicted as kennels. The castle was disused in the 1960s, and it fell into poor repair over the following decades. Restoration work on the castle had begun by 2008, and as of May 2016 the work is ongoing. It is a tall, two-storey with attic and basement mansion, and is built of coursed stugged and squared red sandstone with polished ashlar dressings. There are crowstepped gables, square-shafted Jacobean stacks and scrolled dormerheads. Angle turrets have fishscale slated conical roofs and iron ball finials, and there are gargoyles at the south-west and south-east turrets. The L-plan wing to the north is a single-storey kitchen offices wing. The west main elevation has an elaborate Jacobean doorpiece within a gable, with ringed shafts, a cable-moulded cornice and an elaborate strapworked sopra-porte (overdoor) panel surmounted by a small pediment. A heraldic panel has since been lost, and was flanked by die-blocks with urn finials. There is a two-leaf, eight-panel oak door within the doorpiece. The entrance gable is flanked by corbelled angle turrets. The west elevation also features a four-storey and basement square advanced square tower, buttressed at the ground floor. The east and south elevations feature three-light canted windows projecting from the first floor, corbelled from a wall buttress on the east elevation. An archaeological watching brief was undertaken by Murray Archaeology Services in August 2007 while a cable trench was cut. No features were observed. A photographic survey was carried out in 2008 prior to conversion of part of the castle. The single-storey kennels are constructed from rubble with red sandstone ashlar dressings. The elevations are symmetrical, with a central south-facing gable. The openings on the south elevation have been altered, with some windows blocked. The slate roof is platformed at the ridge and has a continuous vent. Burnside Lodge (NO25NE0068) is the gate lodge for the castle.
Last Update19/07/2022
Updated Bycpalmer
CompilerNCA
Date of Compilation20/12/2016

Google Map for NO25NE0025

National Grid Reference: NO 2908 5904



Event Details

Event DateEvent TypeOASIS ID
2007 Watching-Brief
2008 Building Recording

Excavations and Surveys


Artefact and Ecofact

Ecofact

Samples
Palynology
Ecofact Notes

Monument Types

Monument Type 1Monument Type 2Monument Type 3OrderProbability
CASTLESSANDSTONE A100
MANSIONSBARONIAL B100
FINIALSIRONBALL-CAPPEDC100
BUTTRESSES  D100
DORMER-HEADS SCROLLEDE100
TURRETSANGLE F100
TOWERSSTAIR G100
DOORPIECES  H100
TOWERSENTRANCE I100
WINGS KITCHENJ100
GABLES CROW-STEPPEDK100
ARROW-SLITS  L100
BARTIZANS SPIREDM100
PARAPETS  N100
BALUSTERS  O100
WINDOWS BAYP100
WINDOWS CANTEDQ100
CORBELS  R100
ROOFSPYRAMIDAL S100
SLATES FISHSCALEDT100
OFFICES  U100
KENNELS  V100
OFFICES  W100
DRESSINGSASHLARPOLISHEDX100
STACKS JACOBEANY100
ROOFS CONICALZ100
FINIALSBALL AA100
DOORPIECES JACOBEANAB100
PANELSHERALDICSITE OFAC100
FINIALSURN AD100