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Castle, commissioned by Admiral Archibald Duff in 1847, at the cost of £10,000, after inheriting the estate from his brother. It was the home of the Lord Lieutenant of Banffshire. It was designed by Thomas Mackenzie in 1846-7, with additions by Alexander Reid, of A. and W. Reid, in 1865. There is an asymmetrical northeast front, with an entrance fronting a square 3-storey tower, constructed from coursed rubble with tooled and polished ashlar dressings. It is masked at ground level by substantial porte cochere with a large Gothic traceried window and angle turrets. The main outer ranges terminate with angle turrets rising above the wallhead, and with a projecting library window at the left of the main entrance. A 2-storey service range and service court are linked to the main frontage by a single storey 4-bay block. A picturesque 7-bay southwest garden front had been somewhat regularised in 1865, by raising the west portion to three storeys. There is an advanced centre bay, with a projecting canted window rising two storeys above the raised basement. Shallow Tudor-arched lintels are used on the raised basement windows in southwest and northwest elevations. The first floor fenestration is hoodmoulded, with square or horizontal multi-pane glazing. There is one drum and one corbelled octagonal angle drum-tower. The ground floor fenestration is also hoodmoulded, with corbelled and crenellated wallheads, batteries of tall, coped stacks and slate roofs. There are two 17th century Duff armorials re-set in the wall of the service court. The castle has recently been restored. Inside, there is a double-leafed studded entrance door, with applied Gothic detailing leading to an octagonal vestibule with a lierne ribbed ceiling and central boss. There are angle niches under cusped canopies and a glazed door to stair hall with cusped detailing and cusped fanlight. There is an entrance to the left to the billiard room. The stair hall is top lit, under the 3-storey tower. There is a broad staircase, with a cusped moulded wooden balustrade and a compartmented boarded ceiling with armorial bosses. The library has a white marble chimneypiece with a later cast-iron grate and later 19th century bookcases. The drawing room has a cusped panelled dado and doors. The window shutters are all painted white, with gold detailing. There is very unusual white and gold wallpaper from 1847, which was reproduced and replaced 1988. There is a cusped panelled white marble chimneypiece and a decorative plaster ceiling. The boudoir is between drawing and dining rooms. It is a small octagonal room, with surviving 1847 white and gold decoration and panelled fittings as found in the drawing-room. The dining room has a green and gold painted cusped panelled dado and doors. There are shutters and monogrammed doors. The original Celtic scrolled wallpaper from 1847 is in place, and there is a decorative plaster ceiling. There are French windows to the garden, which are a later enlargement of the window. The first floor landing has an arcaded landing that surrounds an open central square balustraded void under the tower. Each side is supported by paired Tudor arches, with a Tudor rose motif in the spandrels. Walled garden to the south (NJ34SE0106) and site of peasantry to the east (NJ34SE0118).
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