Details |
Former hunting Lodge, now in residential use, built by A Marshall Mackenzie in 1897 with a four-stage tower added in circa 1910 and further alterations and additions in 1923, both by A Vincent Harris. It was formerly used as a hotel, named Tullich Lodge hotel. It is a well-detailed, two- and three-storey with attic, Z-plan Scots Baronial hunting lodge that is constructed from granite ashlar and squared and coursed rubble with polished dressings, string courses, a broad round-arched doorcare with a deeply recessed door, a segmental-arched window, arrowlists, timber transoms and mullions, corbels to the turret and oriel windows and a crenellated tower and bowed bay and crowstepped gables. Largely multi-pane glazing patterns over two-pane and plate glass timber casement and sash and case windows are used. The grey slate roof has coped ashlar gable, axial and wallhead stacks, some with projecting chimney breasts, ashlar-coped skews, moulded skewputts and cast-iron downpipes with decorative rainwater hoppers. The interior incorporates extensive timber panelling, decorative plasterwork and several fine chimneypieces and doorcases. Some doors contain painted glass panels. An armillary sundial was erected by the first owner, Wiliam Reid, as a memorial to a child, and features a surmounting freestanding ornamental stone urn.
|