Aberdeenshire HER - NO79NW0109 - RIVERSTONE HOUSE

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Main Details

Primary ReferenceNO79NW0109
NameRIVERSTONE HOUSE
NRHE Card No.NO79NW61
NRHE Numlink 183129
HES SM No. NULL
HES LB No. NULL
Site Form Documentary Record Only
Site Condition Destroyed
Details Site of a house, probably built in the 17th century, although it may be 16th century, with later additions and alterations. It is shown on the 1st edition OS map as a quadrangular house, with an entrance to the court in the north-west corner. There is a walled garden to the north-east and five associated buildings to the north, west and south-west, one of which is a greenhouse. On the 2nd edition OS map three of the associated buildings have been removed. There is a greenhouse and small rectangular building to the north and a large rectangular building to the west. Current maps show the house has been extended to the east. All the associated buildings have been removed aside from the rectangular building to the west, which has been altered and extended. The original 17th century part of the building is located centrally with the two side wings added latterly. The house began as a U-plan building facing north to the River Dee but was reversed in the early-19th century to become a bay-fronted villa facing south to the River Feugh. The interior of the house was re-designed at the same time. It is built using randomly coursed granite with a harl finish painted white, and is entered through an off-centre portico front door into the entrance hall. The under part of the main central area is a vaulted basement, accessed externally from the east elevation. The building to the west is a coach house constructed from rubble. The house was most recently in use as a bed and breakfast, has been unoccupied since 2007, and has since fallen into a bad state of disrepair. A Level 1 Standing Building Survey was carried out in April 2017 by Murray Archaeology Services prior to proposed demolition. The doorway on the south elevation of the main block no longer has the architraves with lion-head stops that are described by Geddes in 2001. The interior features of the house was mainly from its recent use as a bed and breakfast. Various alterations can be seen, including the removal of the vaulting in the basement described in 2001, which suggests fairly major structural alterations. None of the interior features of the walled garden shown on historic OS maps survives. The coach house and stable show little of their original form, having been converted for residential use in the 20th century.
Last Update30/10/2019
Updated Bycherbert
CompilerNCA
Date of Compilation15/02/2017

Google Map for NO79NW0109

National Grid Reference: NO 7015 9519



Event Details

Event DateEvent TypeOASIS ID
2017 Building Recording mas1-299885

Excavations and Surveys


Artefact and Ecofact

Ecofact

Samples
Palynology
Ecofact Notes

Monument Types

Monument Type 1Monument Type 2Monument Type 3OrderProbability
HOUSESGRANITE A100
GREENHOUSES SITE OFB100
BUILDINGS SITE OFC100
VILLAS  D100
FRONTAGES BAYE100
PORTICOS  F100
BASEMENTS VAULTEDG100
COACH-HOUSESRUBBLE-BUILT H100