Restoration of castles in Scotland explained

The restoration of castles and tower houses in Scotland, generally by private individuals and families, has been taking place for over a century[1] and is of major significance in the field of historic buildings in the country, and sometimes a subject of controversy.[2]

Since the 1950s, two hundred and fifty Scottish castles and tower houses have been restored, around a hundred from a derelict or "roofless ruin" state.[3] Most of these have been converted for private occupation; others, such as Castle Menzies, have become tourist attractions. The former have tended to be of the tower house type, which are a manageable size to convert and live in. A further 150 castles that are still roofed have undergone refurbishment.

Restoration projects

The buildings involved in restoration projects in Scotland vary from partially collapsed, roofless, stone ruins to continuously-occupied residences requiring major repair.  Many have needed extensive rebuilding, especially at the upper levels, but also of internal walls and vaults. A 2011 study found that between 1945 and 2010 ninety-seven castles were "reoccupied from a (near) ruinous state".[3]

In addition, around a further 150 castles and tower houses still in a roofed condition have been upgraded. The work required may constitute a refurbishment – that is, the upgrading and installation of services without material alteration to the structure or major changes to the interior and/or exterior of the building. An example is Cassillis House in Ayrshire which, while not ruinous, was extensively restored in the 2010s.[4]

Conservation and restoration projects on castles have been carried out by private individuals and companies as well as by bodies such as Historic Environment Scotland (HES) and the National Trust for Scotland (NTS). A restoration of the Great Hall of Stirling Castle was completed by Historic Scotland, a predecessor body to HES, in 1999.[5] Parts of the castle have been restored or rebuilt at much earlier dates following its original construction, one of the earliest such projects being in 1617, when James Murray restored the roofs and some of the facilities in advance of a royal visit.[6]

Other castles have been conserved by private trusts, such as the restoration of Portencross Castle which was largely funded by grants from sources such as the Heritage Lottery Fund and the Architectural Heritage Fund.[7] The Landmark Trust has restored tower houses such as Fairburn Tower on the Cromarty Firth in north east Scotland.[8]

The typical restoration process

An example of a typical restoration project is the restoration of Fawside (or Fa'side) Castle near Edinburgh, which was carried out between 1976 and 1982. The work was primarily undertaken to provide a home for the owners.[9] The castle was in a ruinous state, a large part of the building being roofless; many areas of wall heads had fallen away. The project turned out to be far more costly than the owners envisaged. Because of its scale, the owners employed tradesmen to carry out most of the work.

The building was typical of many tower houses, although larger than average. It consisted of two wings: the original 14th-century keep with massive walls and a later L-shaped addition from the 15th–16th century. The keep element was still roofed, but the L-shaped part was roofless and wall tops had fallen away, including those of two bartizans (turrets) where only the bases remained.[10]

This restoration required much research in advance, some conjecture in replacing lost features, and many discussions with Historic Scotland, the local authority in Haddingtonshire, fire officers, the architect and other specialists. Applications for grants, totalling over £100,000, were successful.[11]

After rubble, including fallen masonry, had been removed from the interior, the building work began with the rebuilding of walls, the insertion of new floors, the re-roofing of the L-shaped part and the addition of services, such as plumbing, heating and electrics. Substantial supplies of stone, timber and roof slates had to be sourced. Finally, the exterior of the building was harled. In the course of these activities, several original features of the building were rediscovered, for example, on the second floor of the L-shaped wing, a mural chamber with a sunken recess was located behind an old cupboard.[12]

An aspect of this restoration was the extensive use of modern materials, principally bricks and concrete, for parts of the structure. The re-instated basement level vault was constructed entirely in the latter. Cross walls and bartizans were rebuilt in brick. The use of such materials has generated debate in conservation circles. Some projects have avoided modern materials and rebuilt and repaired only in stone.[13]

Not all 'restorations' of castles and tower houses have been successful. Some have failed for reasons such as lack of finance or have simply taken a very long time.[14]

Conservation and restoration

The motivations for restorations have been various, but most common has been the desire to rescue an old building for private domestic owner-occupation.

The process has caused debate, with Historic Scotland and local planning authorities rejecting many recent restoration projects. In the period from the 1960s to the 1990s, Historic Scotland and its predecessor organisations were more in favour of a restoration approach, approving and grant-aiding a considerable number of restoration projects, largely under the direction of Professor David Walker, the then Chief Inspector of Monuments. Walker names 53 such grant-aided projects.[15] 'Restorers' have argued that, as well as providing homes they are rescuing buildings that would otherwise have eventually decayed or collapsed.  Elements of the 'conservation' lobby argue that ruins should be preserved as found, following Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings (SPAB) principles; other concerns are that inappropriate materials may be used for repairs and rebuilds and that restoration can conceal much of the early history of the building.

The 'conservation' approach became more prominent through the 1990s and beyond. Although HES (formed by a merger of HS and the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland) now has a list of buildings suitable for restoration,[16] fewer and fewer castle restoration projects have been undertaken in the 2000s, as can be seen from Inglis' table of completed restorations (op cit, pp 258–260). This has been due to factors such as a lack of availability of suitable sites, a greater realisation of the huge amount of work and costs that may be involved, and greater reluctance on the part of the authorities to endorse and/or grant aid restoration projects.

Castle Tioram

The best-known example of a rejected restoration project was that off Castle Tioram in Moidart. Tioram gained notoriety as "the epicentre of the restoration controversy"  (Davis, op cit, pp 58–60).

In 1997, Lex Brown of Anta Estates Ltd put forward proposals for restoration of the castle to a habitable status. Historic Scotland refused, and the matter went to a public enquiry, where the Reporter and then Scottish Ministers refused the Appeal in 2002.[17] The matter generated a public debate which was generally in favour of restoration.(Davis, op cit, p 58) In 2016 HES agreed that the castle could be restored and brought back into residential use.[18]

At Castle Tioram a very large sum was spent on surveying and recording the remains by an archaeological team, but work of this nature on a standing building can be expensive and can discourage restoration.(Davis, op cit, 37–39)

Further examples of restorations

A full list of castle restorations up to 2010 is contained in Inglis (op cit). For more details of the restoration processes, the following selected case studies in various books and publications contain more in-depth accounts.

class=unsortableImageCastleLocationDateReferences
AiketAyrshire1970sClow, Brennan-Inglis
AikwoodSelkirkshire1980sFawcett & Rutherford, Brennan-Inglis
140pxBalgonieFife1970sFawcett & Rutherford
BarholmDumfries & Galloway2000sBrennan-Inglis
Caldwell TowerEast Renfrewshire2011Davis
FawsideEast Lothian1970s/80sClow
Fenton TowerEast Lothian2000sDallas, Ed
Liberton TowerMidlothian1990sFawcett & Rutherford
Mains Castle, South LanarkshireEast Kilbride1970s/80sClow
MelgundAngus1990sFawcett & Rutherford
MenziesPerthshire1970sFawcett & Rutherford
MidhopeWest Lothian1990sClow
Muckrach CastleHighland1990sClow
Rossend CastleFife1970sFawcett & Rutherford
Rusco TowerDumfries and Galloway1970sClow
TilquhillyKincardshire1980/90sClow
Towie BarclayAberdeenshire1970sFawcett & Rutherford

See also

Sources and further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Jameson, John H.. Eogan, James. Training and Practice for Modern Day Archaeologists. Springer New York. 2013. 9781461455295. 94.
  2. Book: Fawcett, Richard . A Retrospective View . Walker . David . Rutherford . Allan . Renewed Life for Scottish Castles, CBA Research Report 165 . Council for British Archaeology / Historic Scotland . 2011 . 978-1-902771-86-1 . York, UK . 165–171.
  3. Inglis . Janet . Scotland's Castles: Rescued, Rebuilt and Reoccupied, 1945–2010 . PhD . . 2011 . Dundee, Scotland, UK . 258–260.
  4. Web site: Restoration Home: Cassillis House (Before and After) | History Documentary | Reel Truth History. February 23, 2023. www.youtube.com.
  5. Book: Fawcett, Richard . Rutherford . Allan . Renewed Life for Scottish Castles . CBA Research Report . 165 . Council for British Archaeology, in association with Historic Scotland . 2011 . 978-1-902771-86-1 . York, UK . 109–115.
  6. David Masson, Register of the Privy Council of Scotland: 1613–1616, vol. 10 (Edinburgh, 1891), pp. 517–8.
  7. Web site: Welcome to Portencross Castle. www.portencrosscastle.org.uk. February 23, 2023.
  8. The Renaissance of Fairburn Tower . Castle Studies Group Journal . 2022 . 36 . 288–291 .
  9. Book: Clow . Robert . Restoring Scotland's Castles . John Smith and Son Ltd . 2000 . 0-900673-26-5 . Glasgow . 123–143.
  10. Web site: Fawside Castle. June 8, 2010. February 23, 2023.
  11. Book: Glendinning, Miles. The Conservation Movement: A History of Architectural Preservation : Antiquity to Modernity. Routledge. 2013. 9780415499996. 353.
  12. Book: Craig, Tom . Fawside Castle . Clow . Robert . Restoring Scotland's Castles . John Smith and Son Ltd . 2000 . 0-900673-26-5 . Glasgow . 138.
  13. Book: Cumming, Ian . Clow . Robert . Restoring Scotland's Castles . John Smith and Son Ltd . 2000 . 0-900673-26-5 . Glasgow, UK . 177–191.
  14. Inglis, op cit, The Failed Projects, pp 157–164
  15. Book: Dakin . Audrey . Glendinning . Miles . MacKechnie . Aonghus . Scotland's Castle Culture . John Donald (Birlinn Ltd imprint) . 2011 . 978-1-906566-33-3 . Edinburgh . 173–186.
  16. Web site: Historic Environment Scotland – Castle Conservation Register. data.historic-scotland.gov.uk. February 23, 2023.
  17. Web site: Historic Scotland – News – Public Inquiry Report. March 9, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160309121522/http://www.historic-scotland.gov.uk/index/news/indepth/castletioram/publicinquiryreport.htm . February 23, 2023. 2016-03-09 .
  18. Web site: Castle Tioram. www.historicenvironment.scot. 23 February 2023.
  19. Book: Clow . Robert . Restoring Scotland's Castles . John Smith and Son Ltd . 2000 . 0-900673-26-5 . Glasgow.
  20. Web site: The Castle Studies Group's Homepage. www.castlestudiesgroup.org.uk. February 23, 2023.
  21. Davis . Michael C. . Ayrshire's Castle Restorations . Castle Studies Group Journal . 34 . 116–130 . 2020 .
  22. Web site: Managing Change in the Historic Environment: Castles and Tower Houses. www.historicenvironment.scot. February 23, 2023.
  23. Book: Brennan-Inglis, Janet . Scotland's Castles: Rescued, Rebuilt and Reoccupied . The History Press . 2014 . 978-0-7509-5445-7 . Stroud, UK.
  24. Scotland's Castles rescued, rebuilt and reoccupied, 1945 – 2010. Janet . Inglis . 2011. discovery.dundee.ac.uk.
  25. Miers . Mary . March 2023 . Faultless Towers . Scottish Field . 125 . 3 . 58–63.