Neha Patil (Editor)

Kinross House

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Owner
  
Donald Fothergill

Architectural style
  
Neoclassical architecture

Phone
  
+44 1577 865626

Architect
  
William Bruce

Kinross House

Address
  
Kinross House, Kinross KY13 8ES, United Kingdom

Similar
  
Loch Leven Castle, Balcaskie, Cardenden railway station, Lochgelly railway station, Hopetoun House

Kinross house and gardens perthshire scotland


Kinross House is a late 17th-century country house overlooking Loch Leven, near Kinross in Perth and Kinross, Scotland. Construction of the house was begun in 1686, by the architect Sir William Bruce as his own home. It is regarded as one of his finest works, and was called by Daniel Defoe "the most beautiful and regular piece of Architecture in Scotland".

Contents

The house, which is undoubtedly the most important early classical mansion in Scotland, retains most of its original internal decoration. It was occupied for 200 years as the home of the Montgomery family, who purchased the property in the late 18th century. It has been described as "the coldest house in Scotland", as until it was sold by the Montgomery family it had only four radiators.

In 2010, it was sold to Donald Fothergill, an English businessman, who thoroughly refurbished the house. Fothergill and his family now live in the house. The property is home to two full-time house staff and four full-time gardeners.

Kinross House is also notable in its precocious use of a medieval building as focus. The house itself, and its garden avenue, are deliberately orientated on the 'picturesque' object of 14th-century Loch Leven Castle on an island in the adjacent loch.

Kinross House was featured in the BBC TV series The Country House Revealed (2011) and How We Built Britain (2007).

Kinross house


Publication

The series from BBC titled The Country House Revealed was accompanied by a full length illustrated companion book published by the BBC which featured Kinross House as a dedicated chapter appearing as Chapter Two of the book edition. The six chapters of the book correspond to the six episodes of the BBC series.

References

Kinross House Wikipedia