Kinloch is a Grade C listed building in the Aberdeenshire local planning authority area, Scotland. First listed on 23 September 1991. Farmhouse.
Kinloch
- WRENN ID
- old-wicket-harvest
- Grade
- C
- Local Planning Authority
- Aberdeenshire
- Country
- Scotland
- Date first listed
- 23 September 1991
- Type
- Farmhouse
- Source
- Historic Environment Scotland listing
Description
Kinloch is a two-storey farmhouse built in phases, dating from around 1820 to 1840. It features a conservatory addition that was reconstructed from the upper section of the glazed verandah at the now-demolished Pitfour House, which was taken down in 1927. The farmhouse has a west-facing piend-roof and a central door, with three bays and end stacks. There is a full-height rear wing to the southeast, forming an L-shape, which is shallow in plan and may include parts of an earlier house. A 20th-century square-plan addition with a pyramid roof fills the angle at the northeast.
The farmhouse has plain harled elevations and single-light windows that are widely spaced in the earlier sections. It features tall coped wallhead stacks and slate piended roofs, with the earlier parts having been re-roofed.
The conservatory includes cast-iron water-leaf columns and decorative cast-iron mullions. The original glazed roof has been replaced with an asbestos-tiled roof. There is cast-iron cresting over the south door, which may also have come from Pitfour.
Inside, the drawing room in the west section has a low ceiling adorned with fine gilded plasterwork. It features a pair of elaborate oak chimneypieces with mirror overmantles and tiled register grates, inscribed with 'GNF', the family crest of the Fergusons of Pitfour. These Victorian chimneypieces were assembled from earlier 17th-century fragments that originally belonged in the ballroom at Pitfour. Gilt heraldic cartouches can be found in the plaster frieze of the entrance vestibule.
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